Artigo Revisado por pares

Detection of Analytes by Immunoassay Using Up-Converting Phosphor Technology

2001; Elsevier BV; Volume: 293; Issue: 1 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1006/abio.2001.5105

ISSN

1096-0309

Autores

R. Sam Niedbala, Hans Feindt, Keith Kardos, Timothy Vail, Jarrett L. Burton, Barbara Bielska, Shang Li, David Milunic, Peter A. Bourdelle, Remo P. Vallejo,

Tópico(s)

bioluminescence and chemiluminescence research

Resumo

Up-Converting Phosphor Technology (UPT) is based on lanthanide-containing, submicrometer-sized, ceramic particles that can absorb infrared light and emit visible light. Biological matrices do not up-convert; hence, there is no contribution to test background from sample autofluorescence. Up-converting phosphors do not photobleach and are inert to common assay interferants such as hemoglobin. A reader called UPlink has been developed to interrogate lateral flow test strips that utilize UPT labels. The reader contains a miniaturized, 1-W, infrared laser with peak emission at 980 nm. Preliminary assays that use up-converting phosphor labels, including tests for a drugs of abuse panel and Escherichia coli O157:H7, have been developed. In a "sandwich" assay format, 10(3) org/mL E. coli O157:H7 organisms were detectable in a negative control background of 10(9) other organisms per milliliter of culture medium. Coefficients of variation in concentrations tested from 0 to 10(7) org/mL were all < or =10%. In a competitive inhibition assay format, a multiplexed test simultaneously detected amphetamine, methamphetamine, phencyclidine, and opiates in saliva. For all assays, the percent displacement at 10 ng/mL was > or =40% demonstrating performance comparable with lab-based, commercially available EIAs. All assays were complete in 10 min. The development of rapid tests using UPT creates new applications for on-site testing with sensitivity not available using other label technologies.

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