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1.
Anal Chem ; 88(20): 9902-9907, 2016 Oct 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27598856

RESUMO

The simple, rapid magnetic manipulation of paramagnetic particles (PMPs) paired with the wide range of available surface chemistries has strongly positioned PMPs in the field of analyte isolation. One recent technology, sliding lid for immobilized droplet extractions (SLIDE), presents a simple, rapid alternative to traditional PMP isolation protocols. Rather than remove fluid from PMP-bound analyte, SLIDE directly removes the PMPs from the fluid. SLIDE collects the PMPs on a hydrophobic, removable surface, which allows PMPs to be captured from one well and then transferred and released into a second well. Despite several key advantages, SLIDE remains limited by its passive magnetic manipulation that only allows for a one-time capture-and-release of PMPs, preventing wash steps and limiting purity. Furthermore, the strategy employed by SLIDE constrains the position of the wells, thereby limiting throughput and integration into automated systems. Here, we introduce a new, mechanically and operationally simplistic magnetic manipulation system for integration with the SLIDE technology to overcome the previously stated limitations. This magnetic system is compatible with nearly any plate design, can be integrated into automated workflows, enables high-throughput formats, simplifies mechanical requirements, and is amenable to a range of analytes. Using this magnetic system, PMPs can be collected, released, and resuspended throughout multiple wells regardless of proximity. We demonstrate this system's capabilities to isolate whole cells, mRNA, and DNA, demonstrating up to a 28-fold improvement of purity via the multiwash protocols enabled by this magnetic technology.

2.
ACS Omega ; 3(4): 3908-3917, 2018 Apr 30.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29732449

RESUMO

Magnetic bead-based analyte capture has emerged as a ubiquitous method in cell isolation, enabling the highly specific capture of target populations through simple magnetic manipulation. To date, no "one-size fits all" magnetic bead has been widely adopted leading to an overwhelming number of commercial beads. Ultimately, the ideal bead is one that not only facilitates cell isolation but also proves compatible with the widest range of downstream applications and analytic endpoints. Despite the diverse offering of sizes, coatings, and conjugation chemistries, few studies exist to benchmark the performance characteristics of different commercially available beads; importantly, these bead characteristics ultimately determine the ability of a bead to integrate into the user's assay. In this report, we evaluate bead-based cell isolation considerations, approaches, and results across a subset of commercially available magnetic beads (Dynabeads FlowComps, Dynabeads CELLection, GE Healthcare Sera-Mag SpeedBeads streptavidin-blocked magnetic particles, Dynabeads M-270s, Dynabeads M-280s) to compare and contrast both capture-specific traits (i.e., purity, capture efficacy, and contaminant isolations) and endpoint compatibility (i.e., protein localization, fluorescence imaging, and nucleic acid extraction). We identify specific advantages and contexts of use in which distinct bead products may facilitate experimental goals and integrate into downstream applications.

3.
Lab Chip ; 18(22): 3446-3458, 2018 11 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30334061

RESUMO

Rare cell populations provide a patient-centric tool to monitor disease treatment, response, and resistance. However, understanding rare cells is a complex problem, which requires cell isolation/purification and downstream molecular interrogation - processes challenged by non-target populations, which vary patient-to-patient and change with disease. As such, cell isolation platforms must be amenable to a range of sample types while maintaining high efficiency and purity. The multiplexed technology for automated extraction (mTAE) is a versatile magnetic bead-based isolation platform that facilitates positive, negative, and combinatorial selection with integrated protein staining and nucleic acid isolation. mTAE is validated by isolating circulating tumor cells (CTCs) - a model rare cell population - from breast and prostate cancer patient samples. Negative selection yielded high efficiency capture of CTCs while positive selection yielded higher purity with an average of only 95 contaminant cells captured per milliliter of processed whole blood. With combinatorial selection, an overall increase in capture efficiency was observed, highlighting the potential significance of integrating multiple capture approaches on a single platform. Following capture (and staining), on platform nucleic acid extraction enabled the detection of androgen receptor-related transcripts from CTCs isolated from prostate cancer patients. The flexibility (e.g. negative, positive, combinatorial selection) and capabilities (e.g. isolation, protein staining, and nucleic acid extraction) of mTAE enable users to freely interrogate specific cell populations, a capability required to understand the potential of emerging rare cell populations and readily adapt to the heterogeneity presented across clinical samples.


Assuntos
Separação Celular/instrumentação , Métodos Analíticos de Preparação de Amostras , Linhagem Celular , Desenho de Equipamento , Humanos , Células Neoplásicas Circulantes/patologia , Integração de Sistemas
4.
Integr Biol (Camb) ; 9(11): 876-884, 2017 Nov 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29098230

RESUMO

Quantification of the HIV viral reservoir is critical to understanding HIV latency, advancing patient care and ultimately achieving a cure. To quantify the reservoir, a new metric was recently introduced, which quantified cells carrying multiply spliced HIV RNA. The developed assay, Tat/rev Induced Limiting Dilution Assay (TILDA), enables quantification of cells containing multiply-spliced HIV RNA events as an indicator of reservoir size. Due to TILDA's reliance on a limiting dilution format paired with the rarity of target events, numerous individual reactions are required to obtain a single endpoint. The current assay embodiment uses a whole cell input to detect target RNA sequences without the traditional preceding nucleic acid purification steps. Thus, while the direct measurement of target events from whole cells significantly streamlines the workflow, there is a cost in sensitivity and assay throughput. Here, we apply a new technique for rapid RNA isolation, Exclusion-Based Sample Preparation, to TILDA, with the goal of alleviating these limitations without significantly adding to the workflow. By combining TILDA with multiplexed RNA extraction enabled by exclusion-based sample preparation, assay sensitivity and capacity are improved while maintaining assay simplicity, advancements that could facilitate eventual clinical implementation in detecting rare events in patients.


Assuntos
Técnicas Genéticas , Infecções por HIV/virologia , HIV-1 , Splicing de RNA , RNA Viral , Infecções por HIV/diagnóstico , Humanos , Leucócitos Mononucleares/virologia , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase , Linfócitos T/virologia , Latência Viral
5.
J Biomol Screen ; 21(1): 65-73, 2016 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26420788

RESUMO

Botulinum neurotoxin (BoNT) is the most lethal naturally produced neurotoxin. Due to the extreme toxicity, BoNTs are implicated in bioterrorism, while the specific mechanism of action and long-lasting effect was found to be medically applicable in treating various neurological disorders. Therefore, for both public and patient safety, a highly sensitive, physiologic, and specific assay is needed. In this paper, we show a method for achieving a highly sensitive cell-based assay for BoNT/A detection using the motor neuron-like continuous cell line NG108-15. To achieve high sensitivity, we performed a media optimization study evaluating three commercially available neural supplements in combination with retinoic acid, purmorphamine, transforming growth factor ß1 (TGFß1), and ganglioside GT1b. We found nonlinear combinatorial effects on BoNT/A detection sensitivity, achieving an EC50 of 7.4 U ± 1.5 SD (or ~7.9 pM). The achieved detection sensitivity is comparable to that of assays that used primary and stem cell-derived neurons as well as the mouse lethality assay.


Assuntos
Bioensaio/métodos , Toxinas Botulínicas Tipo A/toxicidade , Meios de Cultura/metabolismo , Neurônios Motores/efeitos dos fármacos , Neurotoxinas/toxicidade , Animais , Linhagem Celular Tumoral , Células-Tronco Embrionárias/efeitos dos fármacos , Gangliosídeos/metabolismo , Camundongos , Morfolinas/metabolismo , Purinas/metabolismo , Ratos , Sensibilidade e Especificidade , Fator de Crescimento Transformador beta1/metabolismo , Tretinoína/metabolismo
6.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 8(24): 15040-5, 2016 Jun 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27249333

RESUMO

Analyte isolation is an important process that spans a range of biomedical disciplines, including diagnostics, research, and forensics. While downstream analytical techniques have advanced in terms of both capability and throughput, analyte isolation technology has lagged behind, increasingly becoming the bottleneck in these processes. Thus, there exists a need for simple, fast, and easy to integrate analyte separation protocols to alleviate this bottleneck. Recently, a new class of technologies has emerged that leverages the movement of paramagnetic particle (PMP)-bound analytes through phase barriers to achieve a high efficiency separation in a single or a few steps. Specifically, the passage of a PMP/analyte aggregate through a phase interface (aqueous/air in this case) acts to efficiently "exclude" unbound (contaminant) material from PMP-bound analytes with higher efficiency than traditional washing-based solid-phase extraction (SPE) protocols (i.e., bind, wash several times, elute). Here, we describe for the first time a new type of "exclusion-based" sample preparation, which we term "AirJump". Upon realizing that much of the contaminant carryover stems from interactions with the sample vessel surface (e.g., pipetting residue, wetting), we aim to eliminate the influence of that factor. Thus, AirJump isolates PMP-bound analyte by "jumping" analyte directly out of a free liquid/air interface. Through careful characterization, we have demonstrated the validity of AirJump isolation through comparison to traditional washing-based isolations. Additionally, we have confirmed the suitability of AirJump in three important independent biological isolations, including protein immunoprecipitation, viral RNA isolation, and cell culture gene expression analysis. Taken together, these data sets demonstrate that AirJump performs efficiently, with high analyte yield, high purity, no cross contamination, rapid time-to-isolation, and excellent reproducibility.


Assuntos
Extração em Fase Sólida/métodos , Perfilação da Expressão Gênica , Imunoprecipitação , Proteínas/isolamento & purificação , RNA Viral/isolamento & purificação , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
7.
PLoS One ; 11(7): e0159397, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27459545

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Expression of programmed-death ligand 1 (PD-L1) in non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) is typically evaluated through invasive biopsies; however, recent advances in the identification of circulating tumor cells (CTCs) may be a less invasive method to assay tumor cells for these purposes. These liquid biopsies rely on accurate identification of CTCs from the diverse populations in the blood, where some tumor cells share characteristics with normal blood cells. While many blood cells can be excluded by their high expression of CD45, neutrophils and other immature myeloid subsets have low to absent expression of CD45 and also express PD-L1. Furthermore, cytokeratin is typically used to identify CTCs, but neutrophils may stain non-specifically for intracellular antibodies, including cytokeratin, thus preventing accurate evaluation of PD-L1 expression on tumor cells. This holds even greater significance when evaluating PD-L1 in epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) positive and EpCAM negative CTCs (as in epithelial-mesenchymal transition (EMT)). METHODS: To evaluate the impact of CTC misidentification on PD-L1 evaluation, we utilized CD11b to identify myeloid cells. CTCs were isolated from patients with metastatic NSCLC using EpCAM, MUC1 or Vimentin capture antibodies and exclusion-based sample preparation (ESP) technology. RESULTS: Large populations of CD11b+CD45lo cells were identified in buffy coats and stained non-specifically for intracellular antibodies including cytokeratin. The amount of CD11b+ cells misidentified as CTCs varied among patients; accounting for 33-100% of traditionally identified CTCs. Cells captured with vimentin had a higher frequency of CD11b+ cells at 41%, compared to 20% and 18% with MUC1 or EpCAM, respectively. Cells misidentified as CTCs ultimately skewed PD-L1 expression to varying degrees across patient samples. CONCLUSIONS: Interfering myeloid populations can be differentiated from true CTCs with additional staining criteria, thus improving the specificity of CTC identification and the accuracy of biomarker evaluation.


Assuntos
Antígeno B7-H1/metabolismo , Biomarcadores Tumorais , Carcinoma Pulmonar de Células não Pequenas/diagnóstico , Carcinoma Pulmonar de Células não Pequenas/metabolismo , Neoplasias Pulmonares/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Pulmonares/metabolismo , Células Neoplásicas Circulantes/metabolismo , Humanos , Imunofenotipagem/métodos , Imunofenotipagem/normas , Metástase Neoplásica , Estadiamento de Neoplasias , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes , Sensibilidade e Especificidade
8.
PLoS One ; 10(12): e0143631, 2015.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26630135

RESUMO

Viral load (VL) measurements are critical to the proper management of HIV in developing countries. However, access to VL assays is limited by the high cost and complexity of existing assays. While there is a need for low cost VL assays, performance must not be compromised. Thus, new assays must be validated on metrics of limit of detection (LOD), accuracy, and dynamic range. Patient plasma samples from the Joint Clinical Research Centre in Uganda were de-identified and measured using both an existing VL assay (Abbott RealTime HIV-1) and our assay, which combines low cost reagents with a simplified method of RNA isolation termed Exclusion-Based Sample Preparation (ESP).71 patient samples with VLs ranging from <40 to >3,000,000 copies/mL were used to compare the two methods. We demonstrated equivalent LOD (~50 copies/mL) and high accuracy (average difference between methods of 0.08 log, R2 = 0.97). Using expenditures from this trial, we estimate that the cost of the reagents and consumables for this assay to be approximately $5 USD. As cost is a significant barrier to implementation of VL testing, we anticipate that our assay will enhance access to this critical monitoring test in developing countries.


Assuntos
Infecções por HIV/economia , Infecções por HIV/virologia , HIV-1/genética , Técnicas de Diagnóstico Molecular/economia , Testes Sorológicos/economia , Manejo de Espécimes/economia , Carga Viral , Infecções por HIV/sangue , Soropositividade para HIV , HIV-1/classificação , HIV-1/isolamento & purificação , Humanos , Técnicas de Diagnóstico Molecular/métodos , RNA Mensageiro/genética , Kit de Reagentes para Diagnóstico , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase em Tempo Real , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase Via Transcriptase Reversa , Testes Sorológicos/métodos
9.
J Lab Autom ; 19(3): 313-21, 2014 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24142472

RESUMO

In developing countries, demand exists for a cost-effective method to evaluate human immunodeficiency virus patients' CD4(+) T-helper cell count. The TH (CD4) cell count is the current marker used to identify when an HIV patient has progressed to acquired immunodeficiency syndrome, which results when the immune system can no longer prevent certain opportunistic infections. A system to perform TH count that obviates the use of costly flow cytometry will enable physicians to more closely follow patients' disease progression and response to therapy in areas where such advanced equipment is unavailable. Our system of two serially-operated immiscible phase exclusion-based cell isolations coupled with a rapid fluorescent readout enables exclusion-based isolation and accurate counting of T-helper cells at lower cost and from a smaller volume of blood than previous methods. TH cell isolation via immiscible filtration assisted by surface tension (IFAST) compares well against the established Dynal T4 Quant Kit and is sensitive at CD4 counts representative of immunocompromised patients (less than 200 TH cells per microliter of blood). Our technique retains use of open, simple-to-operate devices that enable IFAST as a high-throughput, automatable sample preparation method, improving throughput over previous low-resource methods.


Assuntos
Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos/citologia , Separação Celular/instrumentação , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala/instrumentação , Testes Imediatos , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/economia , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/imunologia , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/metabolismo , Síndrome da Imunodeficiência Adquirida/patologia , Automação Laboratorial/economia , Automação Laboratorial/instrumentação , Biomarcadores/sangue , Contagem de Linfócito CD4/economia , Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos/imunologia , Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos/metabolismo , Linfócitos T CD4-Positivos/patologia , Separação Celular/economia , Países em Desenvolvimento , Fluoresceínas/análise , Fluoresceínas/química , Corantes Fluorescentes/análise , Corantes Fluorescentes/química , Fluorometria/economia , Infecções por HIV/economia , Infecções por HIV/imunologia , Infecções por HIV/metabolismo , Infecções por HIV/patologia , Custos de Cuidados de Saúde , Ensaios de Triagem em Larga Escala/economia , Humanos , Microfluídica , Testes Imediatos/economia , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
10.
J Mol Diagn ; 16(3): 297-304, 2014 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24613822

RESUMO

The monitoring of viral load is critical for proper management of antiretroviral therapy for HIV-positive patients. Unfortunately, in the developing world, significant economic and geographical barriers exist, limiting access to this test. The complexity of current viral load assays makes them expensive and their access limited to advanced facilities. We attempted to address these limitations by replacing conventional RNA extraction, one of the essential processes in viral load quantitation, with a simplified technique known as immiscible filtration assisted by surface tension (IFAST). Furthermore, these devices were produced via the embossing of wax, enabling local populations to produce and dispose of their own devices with minimal training or infrastructure, potentially reducing the total assay cost. In addition, IFAST can be used to reduce cold chain dependence during transportation. Viral RNA extracted from raw samples stored at 37°C for 1 week exhibited nearly complete degradation. However, IFAST-purified RNA could be stored at 37°C for 1 week without significant loss. These data suggest that RNA isolated at the point of care (eg, in a rural clinic) via IFAST could be shipped to a central laboratory for quantitative RT-PCR without a cold chain. Using this technology, we have demonstrated accurate and repeatable measurements of viral load on samples with as low as 50 copies per milliliter of sample.


Assuntos
Filtração/instrumentação , Infecções por HIV/diagnóstico , HIV/isolamento & purificação , RNA Viral/isolamento & purificação , Sequência de Bases , Desenho de Equipamento , Filtração/métodos , HIV/genética , Infecções por HIV/virologia , Humanos , Limite de Detecção , RNA Viral/genética , Reação em Cadeia da Polimerase Via Transcriptase Reversa/métodos , Tensão Superficial , Carga Viral
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