AI Article Synopsis

  • Molecular diagnostics offer a personalized and cost-effective approach for treating infectious diseases and cancer, utilizing techniques like rolling circle amplification (RCA) for precise identification of nucleic acids.
  • Superparamagnetic microspheres, particularly the newly developed streptavidin-modified magnetic poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (STV-mag.PHEMA), show promise for efficient multi-step protocols in molecular assays despite showing lower binding efficiency in comparison to traditional methods.
  • Ongoing research aims to optimize these microspheres and assess their effectiveness against similar-sized particles, potentially enhancing their application in clinical diagnostics.

Article Abstract

Molecular diagnostics may provide tailored and cost efficient treatment for infectious disease and cancer. Rolling circle amplification (RCA) of padlock probes guarantees high specificity to identify nucleic acid targets down to single nucleotide resolution in a multiplex fashion. This makes the assay suitable for molecular analysis of various diseases, and interesting to integrate into automated devices for point-of-care analysis. A critical prerequisite for many molecular assays is (i) target-specific isolation from complex clinical samples and (ii) removal of reagents, inhibitors and contaminants between reaction steps. Efficient solid supports are therefore essential to enable multi-step, multi-analyte protocols. Superparamagnetic micro- and nanoparticles, with large surface area and rapid liquid-phase kinetics, are attractive for multi-step protocols. Recently, streptavidin-modified magnetic monodispersed poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (STV-mag.PHEMA) microspheres were developed by multiple swelling polymerization. They are easily separated by a magnet and exhibit low non-specific protein sorption. In this study, the performance and the binding efficiency of STV-mag.PHEMA was addressed by circle-to-circle amplification (C2CA). A lower number of RCA products were detected as compared to the gold standard Dynabeads. Nevertheless, this study was the first to successfully adapt STV-mag.PHEMA microspheres as solid support in a DNA-based protocol, which is an important finding. The STV-mag.PHEMA microspheres were larger with about 16 times less surface area as compared to the Dynabeads, which might partly explain the lower rolling circle product (RCP) count obtained. Further research is currently ongoing comparing particles of similar sizes and optimizing reaction conditions to establish their full utility in the field. Ultimately, low cost and versatile particles are a great resource to facilitate future clinical molecular diagnostics.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.msec.2015.12.061DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

stv-magphema microspheres
12
poly2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate
8
microspheres solid
8
solid support
8
support dna-based
8
molecular diagnostics
8
rolling circle
8
surface area
8
molecular
5
streptavidin-modified monodispersed
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!