A fluorescence sandwich immunoassay for the real-time continuous detection of glucose and insulin in live animals.
Mahla PoudinehCaitlin L MaikawaEric Yue MaJing PanDan MamerowYan HangSam W BakerAhmad BeiramiAlex YoshikawaMichael EisensteinSeung KimJelena VučkovićEric A AppelHyongsok Tom SohPublished in: Nature biomedical engineering (2020)
Biosensors that continuously measure circulating biomolecules in real time could provide insights into the health status of patients and their response to therapeutics. But biosensors for the continuous real-time monitoring of analytes in vivo have only reached nanomolar sensitivity and can measure only a handful of molecules, such as glucose and blood oxygen. Here we show that multiple analytes can be continuously and simultaneously measured with picomolar sensitivity and sub-second resolution via the integration of aptamers and antibodies into a bead-based fluorescence sandwich immunoassay implemented in a custom microfluidic chip. After an incubation time of 30 s, bead fluorescence is measured using a high-speed camera under spatially multiplexed two-colour laser illumination. We used the assay for continuous quantification of glucose and insulin concentrations in the blood of live diabetic rats to resolve inter-animal differences in the pharmacokinetic response to insulin as well as discriminate pharmacokinetic profiles from different insulin formulations. The assay can be readily modified to continuously and simultaneously measure other blood analytes in vivo.
Keyphrases
- high speed
- type diabetes
- label free
- high throughput
- glycemic control
- single molecule
- blood glucose
- diabetic rats
- atomic force microscopy
- end stage renal disease
- chronic kidney disease
- oxidative stress
- single cell
- energy transfer
- newly diagnosed
- ejection fraction
- circulating tumor cells
- high resolution
- small molecule
- sensitive detection
- peritoneal dialysis
- prognostic factors
- adipose tissue
- blood pressure
- patient reported outcomes