Issue 3, 2016

Sensing protein antigen and microvesicle analytes using high-capacity biopolymer nano-carriers

Abstract

Lab-on-a-chip systems with molecular motor driven transport of analytes attached to cytoskeletal filament shuttles (actin filaments, microtubules) circumvent challenges with nanoscale liquid transport. However, the filaments have limited cargo-carrying capacity and limitations either in transportation speed (microtubules) or control over motility direction (actin). To overcome these constraints we here report incorporation of covalently attached antibodies into self-propelled actin bundles (nanocarriers) formed by cross-linking antibody conjugated actin filaments via fascin, a natural actin-bundling protein. We demonstrate high maximum antigen binding activity and propulsion by surface adsorbed myosin motors. Analyte transport capacity is tested using both protein antigens and microvesicles, a novel class of diagnostic markers. Increased incubation concentration with protein antigen in the 0.1–100 nM range (1 min) reduces the fraction of motile bundles and their velocity but maximum transportation capacity of >1 antigen per nm of bundle length is feasible. At sub-nanomolar protein analyte concentration, motility is very well preserved opening for orders of magnitude improved limit of detection using motor driven concentration on nanoscale sensors. Microvesicle-complexing to monoclonal antibodies on the nanocarriers compromises motility but nanocarrier aggregation via microvesicles shows unique potential in label-free detection with the aggregates themselves as non-toxic reporter elements.

Graphical abstract: Sensing protein antigen and microvesicle analytes using high-capacity biopolymer nano-carriers

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
17 Nov 2015
Accepted
23 Nov 2015
First published
23 Nov 2015

Analyst, 2016,141, 836-846

Author version available

Sensing protein antigen and microvesicle analytes using high-capacity biopolymer nano-carriers

S. Kumar, G. Milani, H. Takatsuki, T. Lana, M. Persson, C. Frasson, G. te Kronnie and A. Månsson, Analyst, 2016, 141, 836 DOI: 10.1039/C5AN02377G

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