Preparation Of Hemoglobin Imprinted Surface Plasmon Resonance Biosensors
Özet
Proteins hold many pivotal structural, functional and organization features and closely
associate with the other macromolecules such as lipids and carbohydrates to generate
larger and more complex units in cellular machinery. Researchers have been focused
on discovering fundamental properties of proteins, and realized that they are also one
of the major indicators and predictors in disease stages, as well as recent studies
pointed out that their structure, concentration, and even, orientation are crucial for
facilitating cellular machinery. Due to their multiple roles in cell functionality and
structure, one of the most attractive arena to investigate the significance of proteins is
to detect small biological units for diagnosing diseases. For instance, hemoglobin --an
iron carrying protein in red blood cells-- transports oxygen and carbon dioxide around
the human body and also maintains the acid-base balance in the blood. In clinical
practice, hemoglobin concentrations are closely correlated with several diseases and
health status, including thalassemia, anemia, leukemia, heart disease, and excessive
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loss of blood. Sensitive and accurate detection platforms will have potentially create
new avenues to monitor the concentrations of such vital protein marker, hemoglobin, in
the early detection and highly reliable prediction of disease.
Surface plasmon resonance technology has been considerably utilized to detect protein
biomarkers, eukaryotic cells, bacteria, and viruses for diagnosis purposes. This sensing
platform provides excellent optical modality to measure the changes in refractive index
at the close vicinity of the metal surface. Compared with other sensitive biosensing
modalities, the surface plasmon resonance biosensors holds multiple advantageous,
including real‐time and label-free analysis, high dual sensing modality (surface and bulk
sensitivity), short assay time, independent of small changes in temperature and surface
oscillations, low-cost assay, and multiplexing. Besides these prominent features, the
surface plasmon resonance technology cannot only potentially be integrated with
different surface sensitive tools, and it also enables versatile surface modifications that
can easily be tailored to multiplexed detection.
Molecular imprinting method, one of a fascinating surface modification techniques,
utilizes molecules as templates to create cavities for recognition of targets in the
polymeric matrix. This method provides a broad range of versatility to imprint targets
with different molecular size, three dimensional structure, and physicochemical
properties. In contrast to the complex and time-consuming laboratory surface
modification methods, this method offers a rapid, sensitive, inexpensive, easy-to-use,
and selective approach for the diagnosis, screening and monitoring disorders. Owing
to high selectivity, physical and chemical robustness, high stability, low-cost and
reusability of this method, molecularly imprinted polymers have become very attractive
and been applied in many fields, especially biosensors, diagnosis, and environmental
monitoring.
In this study, a molecularly imprinted surface plasmon resonance biosensor was
designed to detect hemoglobin as a model protein marker. First,
hemoglobin:acrylamide pre-complex was prepared with template and monomer
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mixture, and the cross-linker (methylenebis acrylamide) was applied to the pre-complex
mixture to form a final mixture for polymerization. Followed by addition an initiator and
activator (ammonium persulfate and tetramethyl ethylenediamine) pair to the final
mixture, the monomer mixture was then used to decorate to the surface plasmon
resonance biosensor surfaces. By employing spin coating technique, the monomer
solution was uniformly distributed on the surface plasmon resonance biosensor
surfaces. The polymerization was carried out under by photo-polymerization method.
At the end of the polymerization, the unreacted monomers and impurities were removed
and dried at room temperature. The hemoglobin imprinted surface plasmon resonance
biosensor was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy-attenuated
total reflectance, atomic force microscope, an ellipsometer, and contact angle
measurements. The hemoglobin imprinted surface plasmon resonance biosensor was
tested for real-time detection of hemoglobin from hemoglobin solutions that have
different hemoglobin concentrations. The selectivity and reusability performance of the
hemoglobin imprinted surface plasmon resonance biosensor was also investigated.
In addition, the microfluidic-integrated surface plasmon resonance biosensors were
also prepared for real-time hemoglobin detection by using different layers that are
polymethyl methacrylate, double sided adhesive and gold coating substrate. After the
different modification steps, the microfluidic-integrated surface plasmon resonance
biosensors interacted with different hemoglobin concentration solutions. Finally, the
equilibrium and adsorption isotherm models of interactions between hemoglobin
solutions and two different surface plasmon resonance biosensors were determined.