TY - JOUR
T1 - Lateral Flow Assay Based on Paper–Hydrogel Hybrid Material for Sensitive Point-of-Care Detection of Dengue Virus
AU - Choi, Jane Ru
AU - Yong, Kar Wey
AU - Tang, Ruihua
AU - Gong, Yan
AU - Wen, Ting
AU - Yang, Hui
AU - Li, Ang
AU - Chia, Yook Chin
AU - Pingguan-Murphy, Belinda
AU - Xu, Feng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim
PY - 2017/1/11
Y1 - 2017/1/11
N2 - Paper-based devices have been broadly used for the point-of-care detection of dengue viral nucleic acids due to their simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and readily observable colorimetric readout. However, their moderate sensitivity and functionality have limited their applications. Despite the above-mentioned advantages, paper substrates are lacking in their ability to control fluid flow, in contrast to the flow control enabled by polymer substrates (e.g., agarose) with readily tunable pore size and porosity. Herein, taking the benefits from both materials, the authors propose a strategy to create a hybrid substrate by incorporating agarose into the test strip to achieve flow control for optimal biomolecule interactions. As compared to the unmodified test strip, this strategy allows sensitive detection of targets with an approximately tenfold signal improvement. Additionally, the authors showcase the potential of functionality improvement by creating multiple test zones for semi-quantification of targets, suggesting that the number of visible test zones is directly proportional to the target concentration. The authors further demonstrate the potential of their proposed strategy for clinical assessment by applying it to their prototype sample-to-result test strip to sensitively and semi-quantitatively detect dengue viral RNA from the clinical blood samples. This proposed strategy holds significant promise for detecting various targets for diverse future applications.
AB - Paper-based devices have been broadly used for the point-of-care detection of dengue viral nucleic acids due to their simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and readily observable colorimetric readout. However, their moderate sensitivity and functionality have limited their applications. Despite the above-mentioned advantages, paper substrates are lacking in their ability to control fluid flow, in contrast to the flow control enabled by polymer substrates (e.g., agarose) with readily tunable pore size and porosity. Herein, taking the benefits from both materials, the authors propose a strategy to create a hybrid substrate by incorporating agarose into the test strip to achieve flow control for optimal biomolecule interactions. As compared to the unmodified test strip, this strategy allows sensitive detection of targets with an approximately tenfold signal improvement. Additionally, the authors showcase the potential of functionality improvement by creating multiple test zones for semi-quantification of targets, suggesting that the number of visible test zones is directly proportional to the target concentration. The authors further demonstrate the potential of their proposed strategy for clinical assessment by applying it to their prototype sample-to-result test strip to sensitively and semi-quantitatively detect dengue viral RNA from the clinical blood samples. This proposed strategy holds significant promise for detecting various targets for diverse future applications.
KW - agarose
KW - dengue viral detection
KW - semi-quantification
KW - sensitivity enhancement
KW - test strips
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84997610101&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/adhm.201600920
DO - 10.1002/adhm.201600920
M3 - 文章
C2 - 27860384
AN - SCOPUS:84997610101
SN - 2192-2640
VL - 6
JO - Advanced Healthcare Materials
JF - Advanced Healthcare Materials
IS - 1
M1 - 1600920
ER -