Ratiometric fluorescent immunoassay for the cardiac troponin-I using carbon dots and palladium-iridium nanocubes with peroxidase-mimicking activity.
Xiaofeng TanLianhua ZhangQiaorong TangGengxiu ZhengHe LiPublished in: Mikrochimica acta (2019)
A nanozyme-linked immunosorbent assay is described for cardiac troponin I which is a biomarker for myocardial infarction. The method is based on the use of Pd-Ir nanocubes with excellent peroxidase-like activity. The nanocubes catalyze the oxidization of nonfluorescent o-phenylenediamine (OPD) by H2O2 to form a yellow fluorescent product (oxOPD) with excitation/emission maxima at 400/570 nm. Carbon dots are added as a reference fluorophore. Under the same excitation wavelength, they display blue fluorescence (450 nm). The ELISA uses the Pd-Ir nanocubes as a label for the secondary antibody and OPD as substrate. The ratio of fluorescence intensities at 570 and 450 nm increases in the 1 pg·mL-1 to 1 ng·mL-1 cardiac troponin I concentration range, and the detection limit is 0.31 pg·mL-1. The method was applied to analyze spiked serum samples, and the results compared well with those obtained by a commercial chemiluminescence assay. Graphical abstract Schematic presentation of the ratiometric fluorescence immunoassay for cardiac troponin-I. Pd-Ir nanocubes were employed to fabricate nanozyme-based signal labels for its excellent peroxidase-mimicking activity.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- sensitive detection
- living cells
- hydrogen peroxide
- fluorescent probe
- label free
- single molecule
- photodynamic therapy
- high throughput
- heart failure
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- light emitting
- nitric oxide
- left ventricular
- mass spectrometry
- single cell
- atrial fibrillation
- tandem mass spectrometry