Press Release
Angewandte Chemie International Edition 2006, 45, 7956–7959 doi: 10.1002/anie.200603106 Nr. 46/2006 Just Dive InHighly sensitive but easy to handle: test strips for the rapid detection of cocaineContact: Yi Lu, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana (USA) Registered journalists may download the original article here: A Simple and Sensitive "Dip-Stick" Test in Serum Based on Lateral Flow Separation of Aptamer-Linked Nanostructures Saving the life of a poisoning victim is often a
matter of minutes. It is best when the emergency doctor can perform a
reliable diagnosis on the spot to determine which poison or what type of
drug overdose a patient is suffering from. Complicated laboratory
analyses and a complex apparatus are out of place in the emergency room. A team at
the University of Illinois in Urbana has now laid the foundation for a
new generation of rapid diagnostic tests that are as easy to handle as a
pregnancy test: just dunk them in the sample and see if a colored band
appears. These test strips are as reliable as laboratory methods. As a
prototype, the researchers led by Yi Lu developed a test strip for the
detection of cocaine in biological samples such as saliva, urine, and
blood serum.
“Our method is based on tiny gold spheres and
aptamers,” reports Lu. Aptamers are single-stranded nucleic acid
molecules that bind to certain target molecules with the same strength
and specificity as antibodies. From a large number of DNA strands with
random sequences (a library), it is basically possible to find a
suitable aptamer for almost every target molecule. Says Lu: “The broad
practical application of aptamers has thus far not realized its promise
in practical diagnostics because the corresponding tests could not be
made sufficiently user-friendly for the average user, who has not had
laboratory training.”
The new test strips for cocaine are different. When
the end of the strip is dipped into a sample, the liquid travels along
the strip to reach a zone with small gold-aptamer clumps. The trick lies
in the special structure of these clumps: they are aggregates of
nanoscopic gold spheres coupled to short DNA strands, some containing
the biomolecule biotin. The DNA sequences are complementary to two
regions of the cocaine-specific DNA aptamer. The aptamers bind to these
strands, linking the gold spheres into larger aggregates. When the
cocaine-containing liquid reaches these aggregates, the cocaine molecule
instantly binds to the aptamers and removes them from the network; the
aggregates fall apart into individual gold spheres. These free spheres
are red. When the liquid travels further along the strip, it reaches a
membrane. While the larger gold aggregates are stopped by the membrane,
the red gold spheres are small enough to pass through it. They end up
stuck to a narrow strip of streptavidin, a biomolecule that grabs onto
the biotin on the gold surface like a hook onto an eye. The gold spheres
get concentrated on the narrow strip and become visible as a distinct
red stripe on the test strip.
“Our method is universal,” stresses Lu. “Based on
this principle, we should be able to develop rapid tests for the
emergency diagnosis of a large number of drugs and poisons, as well as
physiological molecules. The same method is also applicable to
environmental monitoring.”
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