A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluorescent signal amplification

A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluorescent signal amplification

Accepted Manuscript A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluoresce...

2MB Sizes 1 Downloads 80 Views

Accepted Manuscript A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluorescent signal amplification Chan Zhang, Pengfei Du, Zejun Jiang, Maojun Jin, Ge Chen, Xiaolin Cao, Xueyan Cui, Yudan Zhang, Ruixing Li, A.M. Abd El-Aty, Jing Wang PII:

S0003-2670(17)31209-6

DOI:

10.1016/j.aca.2017.10.032

Reference:

ACA 235506

To appear in:

Analytica Chimica Acta

Received Date: 21 August 2017 Revised Date:

20 October 2017

Accepted Date: 26 October 2017

Please cite this article as: C. Zhang, P. Du, Z. Jiang, M. Jin, G. Chen, X. Cao, X. Cui, Y. Zhang, R. Li, A.M. Abd El-Aty, J. Wang, A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluorescent signal amplification, Analytica Chimica Acta (2017), doi: 10.1016/j.aca.2017.10.032. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 1

Ms. No.: ACA-17-1940

2

A simple and sensitive competitive bio-barcode immunoassay for triazophos based on

4

multi-modified gold nanoparticles and fluorescent signal amplification

RI PT

3

Chan Zhanga, Pengfei Dub, Zejun Jianga, Maojun Jina, *, Ge Chena, Xiaolin Caoa, Xueyan

5 6

Cuia, Yudan Zhanga, Ruixing Lia, A. M. Abd El-Atyc, d, Jing Wanga, *.

7

a

8

Agro-Product Quality and Safety, Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences; Key Laboratory

9

of Agro-Product Quality and Safety, Ministry of Agriculture, Beijing 100081, P. R. China

M AN U

SC

Institute of Quality Standard and Testing Technology for Agro-Products, Key Laboratory of

10

b

11

Key Laboratory od Agro-Products Processing Technology of Shandong Province; Key

12

Laboratory of Novel Food Resources Processing, Ministry of Agriculture, 202 Gongye North

13

Road, Jinan 250100, P.R. China

14

c

15

Giza, Egypt

16

d

17

Konkuk University, Seoul 143-701, Republic of Korea

TE D

Institute of Agro-Food Science and Technology, Shandong Academy of Agricultural Sciences;

EP

Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Veterinary Medicine, Cairo University, 12211

AC C

Department of Veterinary Pharmacology and Toxicology, College of Veterinary Medicine,

18 19

* Corresponding authors

20

Tel.:

21

+86-10-8210-6568; Fax: +86-10-8210-6567. E-mail: [email protected] (J. Wang)

+86-10-8210-6570.

E-mail:

[email protected]

22

1

(M.

J.

Jin)

and

Tel.:

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Abstract

24

A simple and highly sensitive immunoassay based on a competitive binding and bio-barcode

25

amplification was designed for detection of small molecules, triazophos. The gold

26

nanoparticles (AuNPs) were modified with monoclonal antibodies and 6-carboxyfluorescein

27

labeled single-stranded thiol-oligonucleotides (6-FAM-SH-ssDNAs); the fluorescence of

28

6-FAM was quenched by AuNPs. Ovalbumin-linked haptens were coated on the bottom of

29

microplate to compete with the triazophos in the sample for binding to the antibodies on the

30

AuNP probes. The fluorescence intensity was inversely proportional to analyte concentration.

31

Parameters of AuNP probes preparation and immune reaction were optimized. At the optimal

32

conditions, the salting process was shortened to 1 h and 166 ± 9 ssDNAs were loaded onto a

33

single AuNP. The competitive fluorescence bio-barcode immunoassay was performed on

34

water, rice, cucumber, cabbage and apple samples. The linear range of the method was 0.01–

35

20 µg L-1and the limit of detection (LOD) was 6 ng L-1. The recovery and relative standard

36

deviations (RSDs) ranged from 85.0–110.3% and 9.4–17.4%, respectively. Good correlations

37

were

38

chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). In conclusion, it is suggested that

39

the competitive fluorescent bio-barcode immunoassay had the potential to be used as a

40

sensitive method for detection of a variety of small molecules in various samples.

41

Keywords Immunoassay; Fluorescence; Bio-barcode; Gold nanoparticles; Triazophos.

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

23

the

EP

between

results

of

the

developed

method

and

liquid

AC C

obtained

42 43 44

1. Introduction Triazophos (O, O-diethyl O-(1-phenyl-1H-1,2,4-triazol-3-yl) phosphorothioate) is a

2

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT broad-spectrum, moderately toxic insecticide that has been widely used on a variety of crops

46

in recent years as a good alternative to highly toxic organophosphates such as parathion,

47

parathion methyl, and methamidophos. However, it has a relatively high stability, and its long

48

half-life presents potential risks to human health and the environment [1, 2]. There is

49

widespread concern over the presence of triazophos residues in environment as well as foods

50

[3, 4]. Traditional analytical methods for determination of triazophos include gas

51

chromatography (GC) and liquid or gas chromatography coupled with mass spectrometry

52

(MS). While these methods are sensitive and accurate, they require expensive equipments,

53

skilled technicians, and lengthy analysis [5-8]. In numerous instances, immunoassays have

54

proven to be exceptional tools for pesticide detection, as they are simple, cost-effective, and

55

rapid. Among immunoassay types, enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) is widely

56

popular; however, its sensitivity does not meet testing requirements in some cases. Thence,

57

the establishment of detection methods with high sensitivity has stimulated extensive

58

research.

59

Gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) are widely used in the detection and analysis of chemical and

60

biological molecules, owing to their unique optical, catalytic, electrical, and chemical

61

properties [9-11]. Huo’s group [12] first measured the specific interactions between protein

62

A-immobilized AuNPs and human IgG via detecting the average particle size change using

63

dynamic light scattering (DLS). Storhoff et al. [13] detected DNA sequences based on the

64

colorimetric scattering of AuNP probes. Hou et al. [14] designed an impedimetric

65

immunoassay protocol for carcinoembryonic antigen detection based on enzyme-triggered

66

formation of tyramine-enzyme repeats on AuNP. In 2003, the bio-barcode technique,

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

45

3

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT combined the signal amplification of the bio-barcode and the specific interactions of immune

68

molecules, was first developed by the Mirkin group to detect and quantify prostate-specific

69

antigen [15]. Subsequently, this technique was applied to DNA detection [16, 17]. The system

70

relies on the use of magnetic microparticle probes (MMPs) functionalized with antibodies as

71

well as AuNPs encoded with bio-barcodes and antibodies. The targets, which are dissolved in

72

test solution, are captured by the two probes to form a sandwich construction. The

73

bio-barcodes released from the AuNPs are initially determined by silver amplification or

74

polymerase chain reaction (PCR). The combination of molecular biology and labeling

75

techniques is a hotspot in the detection technology [18-20]. Researchers have modified the

76

detection strategy of bio-barcode immunoassay by enzymes, RCA reaction or other schemes

77

based on. Liu et al. [21] detected proteins using enzyme-labeled AuNP probes that were

78

coated with antibody, single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), and horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Yan

79

et al. [22] developed an amplification strategy based on rolling circle amplification (RCA)

80

reactions. During the RCA reaction, biotin labels were incorporated into the RCA-generated

81

long ssDNA, which bound to avidin-HRP (Av-HRP) to produce enzymatic catalysis-based

82

colorimetric signals. Lv et al. [23] modified AuNPs with antibody and G-quadruplex/hemin.

83

The hemin released by Exonuclease I can capture the photogenerated electrons to

84

significantly amplify the signal intensity. Zhou et al. [24] exploited plasmid-encoded peptide

85

tags as surrogate molecules for the matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight

86

MS identification of target DNA.

87

It has to be noted that the sandwich construction was not suitable for pesticides and other

88

small-molecule haptens, as the latter possess only one antibody-combining site. To conquer

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

67

4

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT the problem, a competition immunoassay may be introduced to replace the double antibody

90

sandwich construction. In 2015, our group first developed a competitive bio-barcode

91

amplification immunoassay for the detection of pesticide residue using quantitative reverse

92

transcription (RT)-PCR [25]. This method had a high sensitivity but was time-consuming,

93

labor-intensive, and expensive. Afterward, we switched our strategy to a sensitive and

94

relatively simple method, in which the AuNPs were modified by antibodies and HRP-labeled

95

ssDNA. After magnetic separation, the substrate was added and the absorbance produced by

96

the enzyme-catalyzed colorimetric reaction was measured. [26].

97

Herein, to further simplify the technique and improve the sensitivity of the previously

98

developed bio-barcode immunoassay, we designed a method for triazophos detection using

99

only one type of probe. The AuNPs were modified with mAb and 6-FAM-SH-ssDNAs and

100

the fluorescence of 6-FAM was quenched by AuNPs. After the competitive reaction between

101

ovalbumin-linked

102

hapten-mAb-AuNP probe complexes were formed at the bottom of the microplate, as shown

103

in Scheme 1. Dithiothreitol (DTT) was used to replace the 6-FAM-SH-ssDNA on the

104

complex and the released fluorescence signal was detected.

106 107

SC

M AN U

TE D (OVA-haptens)

and

triazophos

in

the

sample,

the

EP

haptens

AC C

105

RI PT

89

2. Experimental section 2.1 Chemicals and materials

108

The standard for triazophos (98%) and structural analogues (>95%), bovine serum albumin

109

(BSA), goat anti-mouse IgG, polyethylene glycol (PEG) 20000, DTT, Tris-EDTA (TE) buffer

110

solution (pH 7.4), hydrogen tetrachloroaurate trihydrate (HAuCl4·3H2O, > 99.9%), and

5

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT trisodium citrate were purchased from Sigma-Aldrich (St. Louis, MO, USA). The triazophos

112

hapten and monoclonal antibodies (mAbs) from mouse ascites were generously gifted by the

113

Institute of Pesticide and Environmental Toxicology (IPET), Zhejiang University, China.

114

Oligonucleotides (3’-FAM, 5’-SH C6) were generated by Shanghai Sangon Biotechnology Co.

115

Ltd (Shanghai, China). The 3, 3’ 5, 5’-Tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) ELISA Substrate was

116

purchased from TransGen Biotech Co., Ltd (Beijing, China). Octadecylsilyl (C18, 40–60 µm),

117

and primary secondary amine (PSA, 40–60 µm) were obtained from Agela (Tianjin, China).

118

LC-grade acetonitrile and methanol were supplied by Fisher Scientific (Pittsburgh, PA, USA).

119

All other chemicals, such as anhydrous magnesium sulfate (MgSO4) and sodium acetate

120

(NaCl) and organic solvents of analytical grade or higher were purchased from Beijing

121

Chemical Industry Group Co., Ltd (Beijing, China). Ninety-six-well plates (transparent and

122

black, flat bottom) were obtained from Corning, Inc. (Corning, NY, USA). Ultrapure water (≥

123

18.2 MΩ·cm) produced by a Milli-Q water purification system (Millipore, Bedford, MA,

124

USA) was used in all e experimental works.

125

The buffers used in this study were as follows: salting buffer (consisting of 100 mM

126

phosphate buffered saline (PBS) and 1.3 M NaCl); blocking and storage buffer (consisting of

127

10 mM PBS (pH 7.4), 1% BSA, and 1% PEG 20000); coating buffer (consisting of 50 mM

128

carbonate buffer solution (CBS, pH 9.6)); washing buffer (PBST) (consisting of 10 mM PBS

129

(pH 7.4) and 0.05% Tween 20); blocking buffer (consisting of 10 mM PBS (pH 7.4) and 2%

130

BSA); assay buffer (consisting of 10 mM PBS (pH 7.4) and 0.05% BSA); and ligand

131

exchange buffer (comprising 10 mM PBS (pH 8.0)).

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

111

132

6

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 133

2.2 AuNPs synthesis and modification The 13 nm AuNPs were prepared as previously described [27]. Briefly, 100 mL of 1 mM

135

HAuCL4 aqueous solution was heated to boiling with stirring and refluxing, followed by the

136

addition of 50 mL of 38.8 mM trisodium citrate rapidly to the boiling solution. The color

137

changed from pale yellow to deep red within 5 min; the solution was boiled and stirred for an

138

additional 15 min. After the solution was cooled to ambient temperature (25°C), it was

139

filtered through a 0.22-µm cellulose nitrate filter. The prepared colloidal particles were

140

characterized by UV-Vis spectroscopy (Infinite M200 PRO microplate reader, TECAN,

141

Switzerland) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM, TEI Technai G2 F20, Thermo

142

Fisher Scientific, MA, USA).

143

AuNP probes modified with mAbs and 6-FAM-SH-ssDNA were prepared following a

144

previously reported protocol, with minor modifications [16]. The pH value of the AuNP

145

solution (1 mL) was adjusted to 9.0 with 30 µL 0.1 M K2CO3, and 18.12 µg mAb was

146

thoroughly mixed into the colloidal solution. After withstanding for 1 h, 2 nmol of freshly

147

reduced thiolated ssDNA was mixed into the AuNP-antibody complex solution. Subsequently,

148

30% PEG 20000 aqueous solution and salting buffer were added to final concentrations of 1%

149

and 0.137 M, respectively, followed by incubation at room temperature for 2 h. Thereafter,

150

BSA was added to a final concentration of 1% to block the bare surfaces, and the mixture was

151

incubated for another 1 h. Finally, the unbound antibody and oligonucleotides were removed

152

by two centrifugation steps at 15000 rpm for 20 min at 4°C (Thermo Fisher Scientific, MA,

153

USA). The red precipitate was suspended in 200 µL of blocking and storage buffer and could

154

stay stable for at least two weeks.

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

134

7

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 155

2.3 Competitive fluorescence bio-barcode amplification immunoassay First, 100 µL per well of OVA-triazophos hapten in CBS was added to a black polystyrene

157

microplate and incubated overnight at 4°C. The coated plate was washed three times with

158

PBST followed by blocking with 300 µL blocking buffer for 1 h at 37°C. Then 50 µL of

159

sample extract or triazophos standard solution, in 10% (v/v) methanol-PBS (0.01 M, pH 7.4),

160

and 50 µL AuNP probes, diluted in assay buffer, were sequentially added to the microplate.

161

During incubation at 37°C for 1 h, the hapten coating the bottom of the microplate and the

162

triazophos in the sample compete for binding with the mAb adsorbed on the surface of the

163

AuNPs. When bound, the fluorescence of 6-FAM is quenched by the AuNPs due to

164

fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) [28-31]. The unbound pesticide and AuNP

165

probes were removed by three washes with PBST. Finally, 100 µL of DTT was added to

166

displace the 6-FAM-SH-ssDNA by ligand exchange [16]. The inhibition of fluorescence

167

intensity (Ex489nm/Em521nm, Infinite M200 PRO microplate reader, TECAN, Switzerland) and

168

the logarithm of the pesticide concentration exhibited a linear relationship.

SC

M AN U

TE D

EP

170

2.4 Indirect competitive ELISA

AC C

169

RI PT

156

171

The coating, blocking, and washing of 96-well transparent polystyrene microplates were

172

performed as described above.

173

standard solution in 10% (v/v) methanol-PBS (0.01 M, pH 7.4) and 50 µL of diluted mAb

174

were sequentially added to the microplate. After incubation at 37°C for 1 h and three washes

175

with PBST, 100 µL goat anti-mouse IgG was added, and the plate was incubated at 37°C for

176

1 h. Afterward, 100 µL TME was added and the plate was incubated for 15 min at 37°C.

Subsequently, 50 µL of sample extract or triazophos

8

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 177

Finally, 50 µL of 2 M H2SO4 was added to terminate the reaction and the absorbance at 450

178

nm was measured.

179

2.5 Sample treatment The samples were tap water from the laboratory, and rice, cucumbers, cabbages, and apples

181

bought from a local market in Beijing. All samples were proved to be free from triazophos

182

using LC-MS/MS. The water samples were diluted directly with 0.01 M PBS and 10%

183

methanol. The pretreatments of other samples were carried out according to the quick, easy,

184

cheap, effective, rugged, and safe “QuEChERS” with slight modifications [32]. Briefly, 10 g

185

(5 g for rice) samples were weighed into 50 mL centrifuge tubes and mixed thoroughly by

186

vortexing for 1 min with 10 mL acetonitrile (5 mL of water was added to the rice samples

187

before acetonitrile). After adding 4 g MgSO4 and 1 g NaCl, the mixture was vigorously

188

shaken for 1 min and then centrifuged for 5 min at 5000 rpm. Afterward, 2 mL of supernatant

189

was transferred to a 10 mL centrifuge tube containing 100 mg PSA, 100 mg C18 and 150 mg

190

MgSO4. After vortexing for 1 min, the tubes were centrifuged for 5 min at 10000 rpm. Half of

191

the supernatant was transferred to injection vials for LC-MS/MS detection (See Suppl.

192

materials) and the other was concentrated under a stream of nitrogen. Finally, the residue was

193

dissolved in 10% methanol-PBS and examined by competitive bio-barcode fluorescent

194

amplification immunoassay and ELISA.

196

SC

M AN U

TE D

EP

AC C

195

RI PT

180

3. Results and discussion

197

3.1 AuNP probe preparation and optimization

198

A solution of 13 nm AuNPs, which exhibited a maximum absorption at 518 nm (Fig. 1(A),

9

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT black line) was prepared according to the citrate reduction method. The TEM image in Fig.

200

1(B) demonstrates that the prepared AuNPs exhibited consistent diameter and did not

201

aggregate. The concentration of prepared AuNPs calculated by the Beer-Lambert Law was

202

9.9 nM, using an extinction coefficient of 2.47×108 M−1·cm−1 [33]. The gold nanoparticles

203

were simultaneously functionalized with 6-FAM-SH-ssDNA and triazophos mAbs. A salt

204

aging process is necessary to load the negatively charged DNA onto the citrate ion-adsorbed

205

surface of AuNPs. To prevent the irreversible aggregation of colloidal gold, the stepwise

206

addition of NaCl often takes one to two days. A previous study indicated that high molecular

207

weight PEG stabilizes the system by depletion stabilization, and over 700 DNAs may be

208

loaded onto each 50 nm AuNP with 600 mM NaCl within 2 h [34]. Therefore, this experiment

209

tested the stability of antibody-modified AuNPs in PEG 20000 by NaCl titration [16]. As

210

shown in Fig. A.1 (A), the maximum absorption wavelength displayed a redshift in PEG

211

20000 concentrations below 1%, but remained at 524 nm in higher concentrations.

212

Comparative tests with the traditional, time-consuming method revealed that PEG 20000

213

reduced the irreversible aggregation and the occurrence of oil membrane (Fig. A. 1 (B)). The

214

presence of PEG 20000 made the time-consuming salting process unnecessary. The

215

6-FAM-SH-ssDNA was maximally loaded after 1 h. It has to be noted that each

216

centrifugation step may cause a loss of approximately 10% of AuNPs, and approximately 96%

217

supernatant could be removed. Thus, to avoid excessive loss of gold colloidal, two times

218

centrifugation are enough to remove most of the unbound materials.

219

Previous studies have demonstrated that the nucleobase sequence plays a role in the binding

220

of thiol-oligonucleotides to AuNPs, because of the different adsorption affinity of ssDNA

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

199

10

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT bases to gold. Thymidine deoxyribonucleotides (dT) have the lowest adsorption affinity to the

222

AuNP surface compared to guanine, cytosine, and alanine deoxyribonucleotides (dG, dC, and

223

dA, respectively), which contributes to substantially higher surface coverage of strands with

224

(dT)20 than (dA)20 [35,36]. In addition, adsorption of deoxynucleosides, especially dA to gold

225

causes the ssDNA strands to lay flat, therefore occupying more surface area than upright

226

strands would, and hindering subsequent thiol-ssDNA adsorption [37]. Therefore, to select

227

the optimal strand for the probes, various sequences and lengths of ssDNA were used to label

228

the AuNP surface, as shown in Table 1. Sequences 1-6 were used to test the sequence effect

229

on the coverage and sequences 6-10 were used to optimize the sequence length. The

230

fluorescence intensity markedly increased when the spacer increased from (dT)0 to (dT)5, then

231

increased slowly as the dT spacer length increased from 5 to 25 bases (Fig. 2(A)). Moreover,

232

the fluorescence intensity and ssDNA coverage substantially decreased as ligand length

233

increased from 5 to 25 bases (Fig. 2(B)). The number of ssDNA molecules coating each

234

particle was calculated by detecting the fluorescence intensity of the supernatant and

235

quantifying it based on a standard curve of fluorescence (Fig. A.2) [31]. For a gold solution

236

without PEG 20000, long oligonucleotides enhance the surface coverage and stability of

237

AuNPs due to steric hindrance [35]. However, interestingly, in the presence of PEG, the

238

shorter the oligonucleotides were, the higher the coverage was, since shorter oligonucleotides

239

have smaller steric hindrance. Thence, an oligonucleotide sequence of (dT)5 was used to

240

prepare the AuNP probes.

241

The mAb and thiol-oligonucleotide coverage affects the sensitivity of the method. The

242

concentrations of mAb and ssDNA were therefore optimized. Firstly, AuNP probes were

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

221

11

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT prepared by adding 2, 4, 8, and 16 µL of mAb to 1 mL of colloidal gold solutions at final

244

concentrations of 9.0, 18.1, 36.2, and 72.5 mg L -1 with excess ssDNA (molar rate, 500:1).

245

The fluorescence intensity of the supernatant before and after modification was measured and

246

the difference represented the amount of ssDNA loaded on the particle surface. Because of

247

the increase of surface occupancy by mAbs, the fluorescence intensity decreased gradually

248

when the mAbs concentration increased. However, when the probes were added to the

249

microplate to combine with the coated triazophos hapten, the maximum fluorescence

250

intensity appeared at 36.2 mg L -1. The lower fluorescence value of probes prepared with

251

mAb concentrations of 9.0 and 18.1 mg L -1 might be due to the decreased antibodies on the

252

particle surface (to form probe-antibody-hapten complexes), despite these probes carrying

253

more 6-FAM-SH-ssDNA. Otherwise, the concentration of ssDNAs was optimized by adding

254

a series amount of ssDNA to the final molar ratio of ssDNA and AuNPs of 100:1, 200:1,

255

300:1, 400:1 and 500:1. As the results shown, the fluorescence increased accordingly as the

256

ratio increased from 1:100 to 1:300, and showed a decrease trend as the ratio continued to

257

increase to 1:500. Therefore, 18.1 mg L

258

6-FAM-SH-ssDNA/AuNPs was used in subsequent experiments.

SC

M AN U

TE D

EP

-1

mAbs and a 1:300 molar ratio of

AC C

259

RI PT

243

260

3.2 Characterization of AuNP probes

261

As shown in Scheme 1, the AuNP probes were modified with triazophos mAbs and

262

6-FAM-SH-ssDNA using the optimized conditions and characterized by UV-Vis

263

spectroscopy and TEM. Fig. 1(A) shows that after modification with mAbs and

264

6-FAM-SH-ssDNA, the maximum absorbance peak of AuNPs shifted from 518 nm to 524

12

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT nm and 528 nm, successively. Compared with the bare AuNPs in Fig. 1(B), shadows appear

266

surrounding the modified nanoparticles in Fig. 1(C), which suggests the presence of a coating

267

material of lower electron density. The average number of ssDNAs loaded onto each AuNP

268

was determined to be 166 ± 9 by the standard curve of fluorescence described above. UV-Vis

269

spectroscopy was performed to determine the number of antibodies on the AuNPs. After

270

centrifugation, the absorbance of the supernatant was measured at 280 nm and the

271

concentration was calculated by the Beer-Lambert Law. The number of antibodies coated on

272

the AuNP surfaces was approximately 4.

M AN U

273

SC

RI PT

265

3.3 Method establishment

275

3.3.1 Optimization of the immune reagents

276

The concentrations of the reagents participating in an immunoassay have a strong influence

277

on the detection sensitivity and the linear range of competition reactions. A chessboard assay

278

was performed to select the working concentrations of the OVA-hapten and AuNP probes.

279

The concentrations of OVA-hapten were 0.63, 0.31, 0.16, and 0.08 mg L -1 and the mAb

280

concentrations on the AuNP probes were 4.5, 2.2, and 1.1 mg L -1. The results are shown in

281

Table 2. In this work, the IC50 (the concentration of analyte that produced 50% inhibition of

282

the maximum fluorescence intensity), IC10 (the concentration of analyte that produced 10%

283

inhibition of the maximal fluorescence, defined as the limit of detection (LOD)), and ratio of

284

maximal fluorescence to IC50 (Fmax/IC50) were used to evaluate the performance of the

285

immunoassays. Lower IC50 and IC10 values indicate higher sensitivity, as do higher Fmax/IC50

286

values. The optimal concentrations of OVA-hapten and AuNP mAbs were 0.16 and 2.23 mg L

AC C

EP

TE D

274

13

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT 287

-1

, respectively.

288

3.3.2 Optimization of methanol concentration

290

Methanol concentrations influence the assay sensitivity by changing the characteristics of the

291

analyte solution or affecting the interactions between the mAbs and the hapten coating in the

292

well [38]. The methanol concentration was optimized by preparing standard curves of various

293

amounts of methanol in 0.01 M PBS. The optimal concentration was selected by comparing

294

the IC50, IC10, and Fmax/IC50 of each standard curve. As shown in Fig. 3, the sensitivity

295

initially improved with increased methanol concentration, reached a maximum at 10%, then

296

decreased thereafter. Thus, 10% methanol-PBS was used as the diluted solution for standards

297

and sample extraction.

M AN U

SC

RI PT

289

TE D

298

3.3.3 Optimization of DTT

300

FRET between AuNPs (donor) and the 6-FAM fluorophore (acceptor) results in fluorescence

301

quenching. Previously published report has shown that DTT displaces thiol-capped

302

oligonucleotides from the surface of AuNPs [39]. Herein, DTT was used to displace 6-FAM

303

from the AuNPs by ligand exchange, restoring fluorescent emission. The concentration and

304

incubation time for DTT were optimized. From Fig. A.3 we can imply that the use of 5 mM

305

DTT for 90 min was optimal for the release of the 6-FAM-SH-ssDNAs from the

306

hapten-antibody-probe complex.

AC C

EP

299

307 308

3.3.4 Standard curve construction

14

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Under optimized conditions, a standard curve of the fluorescence bio-barcode amplification

310

immunoassay was generated using inhibition vs. the logarithm of concentration of triazophos.

311

As shown in Fig. 4, the competition curve (y = 24.95 x + 65.18, R2 = 0.9738, n=3) showed a

312

linear range of detection from 0.01–20 µg L -1. The average IC50 value was 0.25 µg L -1 and

313

the LOD was 6 ng L -1. The sensitivity of the established method was over one order of

314

magnitude lower than an indirect competitive ELISA performed under the same laboratory

315

conditions, which had a linear range of 0.1–30 µg L -1, and IC50 and LOD values of 1.1 and

316

0.08 µg L -1, respectively (Fig. A.4).

M AN U

317

SC

RI PT

309

3.3.5 Cross-Reactivity (CR)

319

The specificity of modified AuNP probes was evaluated by testing the CR with structural

320

analogues of triazophos. Standard solutions (100 mg L-1) of triazophos, chlorpyrifos,

321

chlorpyrifos-methyl, parathion, malathion, diazinon, and fenitrothion were diluted in 10%

322

methanol-PBS to 2000, 500, 100, 20, 5, 1, 0.2, 0.05, and 0.01 µg L -1 for standard curve

323

generation. The CR values were calculated as follows: CR (%) = (IC50 of triazophos/IC50 of

324

analogue) × 100. The structures and results are shown in Table 3. The IC50 values of all six

325

analogues exceeded 2000 µg L -1, and the CRs were < 0.01%. This suggests that the present

326

immunoassay has excellent specificity for triazophos.

EP

AC C

327

TE D

318

328

3.3.6 Accuracy and precision

329

The accuracy of the fluorescence bio-barcode amplification immunoassay was determined by

330

measuring the recovery from samples spiked with triazophos standards at three

15

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT concentrations: 5, 10, and 50 µg kg-1. The precision was evaluated by determining the relative

332

standard deviation (RSD) of 5 replicates. Sample extracts were detected by the bio-barcode

333

method, ELISA, and LC-MS/MS simultaneously and the results are shown in Table 4. The

334

average recovery and RSD of the fluorescence bio-barcode immunoassay were 96.1% and

335

12.3%, ranging from 85.0–110.3% and 9.4–17.4%, respectively. The results indicate that the

336

method satisfies the requirements of pesticide residue analytical methods. The average

337

recovery and RSD of the ELISA were 89.1% and 9.0%, ranging from 84.9–98.4% and 6.4–

338

13.2%, respectively, and the average recovery and RSD of the LC-MS/MS were 95.6% and

339

1.1%, ranging from 87.1–107.7% and 0.1–2.1%, respectively. Regression analysis was

340

performed to compare the detection concentrations of the developed method and LC-MS/MS.

341

As compiled in Table 5, a significant correlation has been demonstrated between the two

342

methods for each sample. The square of the coefficients of determination (R2) ranged from

343

0.9709–0.9841 at a confidence level of 95%. These results indicate that the fluorescence

344

bio-barcode amplification immunoassay is a reliable method for triazophos detection.

SC

M AN U

TE D

EP

345

RI PT

331

3.4 Comparison between various immunoassays

347

Indirect competitive ELISA was performed under the same laboratory conditions and the

348

results were compared with that obtained for the competitive fluorescence bio-barcode

349

immunoassay. In terms of operation, the bio-barcode method simplified the steps after

350

immune combination. The fluorescence signal was detected immediately after shocking with

351

DTT, while the ELISA needs to go through the later step of washing, catalyzing, and

352

termination. No matter of analysis time, assay cost or detection accuracy, this method was

AC C

346

16

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT almost the same as ELISA. High sensitivity is the prominent advantage of this method over

354

indirect competitive ELISA. Finally, this method can achieve multiplex detection using

355

diverse AuNP probes modified with different antibodies and fluorescent oligonucleotides.

356

A detailed comparison of the characteristics of this method and other methods for triazophos

357

detection is provided in Table 6. The current developed method was applied to a variety of

358

samples, including water, fruits, grains, and leafy vegetables. A linear range of more than four

359

orders of magnitude makes this method suitable for a wider concentration range of pesticide

360

residue detection. Methods based on bio-barcoding have lower LODs compared with

361

chemiluminescent enzyme-, fluorescence polarization-, and bead-array competition-based

362

immunoassays. Previous bio-barcoding methods established in our laboratory based on

363

RT-PCR or HRP catalysis were sensitive; however they were complicated, since two types of

364

probes were required for detection. In addition, the wash and separation were operated in a

365

centrifuge tube, which makes it impractical for high numbers of samples’ detection. The

366

established method herein has the advantages of high sensitivity and simple operation,

367

making it promising for on-site detection of pesticide residues in agro-products and

368

environmental samples.

370

SC

M AN U

TE D

EP

AC C

369

RI PT

353

4. Conclusion

371

Herein, we developed and validated a simple and sensitive immunoassay for triazophos

372

detection using multi-modified AuNPs and fluorescent amplification. The present method

373

was successfully applied to triazophos detection in water, vegetables, fruits, and grains, with

374

low IC50 and detection limit values and a wide working range. This new strategy is promising

17

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT for the rapid detection of pesticide residues in the environment and agro-products. The

376

competitive fluorescence bio-barcode immunoassay in this study provides a model for the

377

detection of small molecules and has broad prospects for multi-target detection using various

378

AuNP probes with the corresponding antibodies.

RI PT

375

379

Conflicts of interest: The authors have declared no conflict of interest

381

Acknowledgements

382

This work was supported by the funding from the National Natural Science Foundation of

383

China

384

the Central Public-interest Scientific Institution Basal Research Fund for Chinese Academy

385

of Agricultural Sciences (grant number Y2017JC13).

386

Appendix A. Supplementary data

numbers

31671938,

31201371)

and

TE D

(grant

M AN U

SC

380

387 388

References

390

[1] H.C. Meher, V.T. Gajbhiye, G. Singh, A. Kamra, G. Chawla, Persistence and nematicidal

391

efficacy of carbosulfan, cadusafos, phorate, and triazophos in soil and uptake by chickpea and

392

tomato crops under tropical conditions, J. Agric. Food Chem. 58 (2010) 1815-1822.

393

[2] B. Zhu, Y.X. Gong, L. Liu, D.L. Li, Y. Wang, F. Ling, G.X. Wang, Toxic effects of

394

triazophos on rare minnow (Gobiocypris rarus) embryos and larvae, Chemosphere 108 (2014)

395

46-54.

396

[3] Y.R. Guo, S.Y. Liu, W.J. Gui, G.N. Zhu, Gold immunochromatographic assay for

AC C

EP

389

18

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT simultaneous detection of carbofuran and triazophos in water samples, Anal. Biochem. 389

398

(2009) 32-39.

399

[4] P. Du, M. Jin, L. Yang, X. Du, G. Chen, C. Zhang, F. Jin, H. Shao, Y. She, S. Wang, A

400

rapid immunomagnetic-bead-based immunoassay for triazophos analysis, RSC Adv. 5 (2015)

401

81046-81051.

402

[5] S.M. Taha, S.A. Gadalla, Development of an efficient method for multi residue analysis of

403

160 pesticides in herbal plant by ethyl acetate hexane mixture with direct injection to

404

GC-MS/MS, Talanta 174 (2017) 767-779.

405

[6] T.M. Rizzetti, M. Kemmerich, M.L. Martins, O.D. Prestes, M.B. Adaime, R. Zanella,

406

Optimization of a QuEChERS based method by means of central composite design for

407

pesticide multiresidue determination in orange juice by UHPLC-MS/MS, Food Chem. 196

408

(2016) 25-33.

409

[7] N. Chamkasem, L.W. Ollis, T. Harmon, S. Lee, G. Mercer, Analysis of 136 pesticides in

410

avocado using a modified QuEChERS method with LC-MS/MS and GC-MS/MS, J. Agric.

411

Food Chem. 61 (2013) 2315-2329.

412

[8] H. Stahnke, T. Reemtsma, L. Alder, Compensation of matrix effects by postcolumn

413

infusion of a monitor substance in multiresidue analysis with LC-MS/MS, Anal. Chem. 81

414

(2009) 2185-2192.

415

[9] H. Jans, Q. Huo, Gold nanoparticle-enabled biological and chemical detection and

416

analysis, Chem. Soc. Rev. 41 (2012) 2849-2866.

417

[10] V.K. Upadhyayula, Functionalized gold nanoparticle supported sensory mechanisms

418

applied in detection of chemical and biological threat agents: a review, Anal. Chim. Acta 715

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

397

19

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT (2012) 1-18.

420

[11] P.A. Rasheed, N. Sandhyarani, Electrochemical DNA sensors based on the use of gold

421

nanoparticles: a review on recent developments, Microchim. Acta 184 (2017) 981-1000.

422

[12] H. Jans, X. Liu, L. Austin, G. Maes, Q. Huo, Dynamic light scattering as a powerful tool

423

for gold nanoparticle bioconjugation and biomolecular binding studies, Anal. Chem. 81 (2009)

424

9425-9432.

425

[13] J.J. Storhoff, A.D. Lucas, V. Garimella, Y.P. Bao, U.R. Muller, Homogeneous detection

426

of unamplified genomic DNA sequences based on colorimetric scatter of gold nanoparticle

427

probes, Nat. Biotechnol. 22 (2004) 883-887.

428

[14] L. Hou, Y. Tang, M. Xu, Z. Gao, D. Tang. Tyramine-based enzymatic conjugate repeats

429

for ultrasensitive immunoassay accompanying tyramine signal amplification with enzymatic

430

biocatalytic precipitation, Anal. Chem. 86 (2014) 8352-8358.

431

[15] J.M. Nam, C.S. Thaxton, C.A. Mirkin, Nanoparticle-based bio-bar codes for the

432

ultrasensitive detection of proteins, Science 301 (2003) 1884-1886.

433

[16] H.D. Hill, C.A. Mirkin, The bio-barcode assay for the detection of protein and nucleic

434

acid targets using DTT-induced ligand exchange, Nat. Protoc 1 (2006) 324-336.

435

[17] J.M. Nam, S.I. Stoeva, C.A. Mirkin, Bio-bar-code-based DNA detection with PCR-like

436

sensitivity, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 126 (2004) 5932-5933.

437

[18] J. Zhuang, W. Lai, G. Chen, D. Tang, A rolling circle amplification-based DNA machine

438

for miRNA screening coupling catalytic hairpin assembly with DNAzyme formation, Chem

439

Commun (Camb) 50 (2014) 2935-2938.

440

[19] Z. Qiu, J. Shu, D. Tang, Bioresponsive Release System for Visual Fluorescence

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

419

20

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Detection of Carcinoembryonic Antigen from Mesoporous Silica Nanocontainers Mediated

442

Optical Color on Quantum Dot-Enzyme-Impregnated Paper, Anal. Chem. 89 (2017)

443

5152-5160.

444

[20] Z. Qiu, J. Shu, Y. He, Z. Lin, K. Zhang, S. Lv, D. Tang, CdTe/CdSe quantum dot-based

445

fluorescent aptasensor with hemin/G-quadruplex DNzyme for sensitive detection of

446

lysozyme using rolling circle amplification and strand hybridization, Biosens. Bioelectron. 87

447

(2017) 18-24.

448

[21] M. Liu, C. Jia, Y. Huang, X. Lou, S. Yao, Q. Jin, J. Zhao, J. Xiang, Highly sensitive

449

protein detection using enzyme-labeled gold nanoparticle probes, Analyst 135 (2010)

450

327-331.

451

[22] J. Yan, S. Song, B. Li, Q. Zhang, Q. Huang, H. Zhang, C. Fan, An on-nanoparticle

452

rolling-circle amplification platform for ultrasensitive protein detection in biological fluids,

453

Small 6 (2010) 2520-2525.

454

[23] S. Lv, K. Zhang, Z. Lin, D.Tang, Novel photoelectrochemical immunosensor for

455

disease-related protein assisted by hemin/G-quadruplex-based DNAzyme on gold

456

nanoparticles to enhance cathodic photocurrent on p-CuBi2O4 semiconductor, Biosens.

457

Bioelectron. 96 (2017) 317-323.

458

[24] X. Zhou, P. Cao, Y. Tian, J. Zhu, Expressed peptide assay for DNA detection, J. Am.

459

Chem. Soc. 132 (2010) 4161-4168.

460

[25] P. Du, M. Jin, G. Chen, C. Zhang, Z. Jiang, Y. Zhang, P. Zou, Y. She, F. Jin, H. Shao, S.

461

Wang, L. Zheng, J. Wang, A Competitive Bio-Barcode Amplification Immunoassay for Small

462

Molecules Based on Nanoparticles, Sci. Rep. 6 (2016) 38114.

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

441

21

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT [26] P. Du, M. Jin, G. Chen, C. Zhang, X. Cui, Y. Zhang, Y. Zhang, P. Zou, Z. Jiang, X. Cao,

464

Y. She, F. Jin, J. Wang, Competitive colorimetric triazophos immunoassay employing

465

magnetic microspheres and multi-labeled gold nanoparticles along with enzymatic signal

466

enhancement, Microchim. Acta 184 (2017) 3705-3712.

467

[27] K.C. Grabar, R.G. Freeman, M.B. Hommer, M.J. Natan, Preparation and characterization

468

of Au colloid monolayers, Anal. Chem. 67 (1995) 735-743.

469

[28] L.M. Demers, C.A. Mirkin, R.C. Mucic, R.A. Reynolds, R.L. Letsinger, R. Elghanian, G.

470

Viswanadham, A Fluorescence-Based Method for Determining the Surface Coverage and

471

Hybridization Efficiency of Thiol-Capped Oligonucleotides Bound to Gold Thin Films and

472

Nanoparticles, Anal. Chem. 72 (2000) 5535-5541.

473

[29] P.C. Ray, A. Fortner, G.K. Darbha, Gold nanoparticle based FRET assay for the

474

detection of DNA cleavage, J. Phys. Chem. B 110 (2006) 20745-20748.

475

[30] L. Du, W. Ji, Y. Zhang, C. Zhang, G. Liu, S. Wang, An ultrasensitive detection of

476

17beta-estradiol using a gold nanoparticle-based fluorescence immunoassay, Analyst 140

477

(2015) 2001-2007.

478

[31] B.K. Oh, J.M. Nam, S.W. Lee, C.A. Mirkin, A fluorophore-based bio-barcode

479

amplification assay for proteins, Small 2 (2006) 103-108.

480

[32] M. Anastassiades, S.J. Lehotay, D. Štajnbaher, F.J. Schenck, (). Fast and easy

481

multiresidue method employing acetonitrile extraction/partitioning and “dispersive

482

solid-phase

483

produce. J. AOAC Int. 86 (2003) 412-431.

484

[33] X. Liu, M. Atwater, J. Wang, Q. Huo, Extinction coefficient of gold nanoparticles with

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

463

extraction”

for

the

determination

22

of

pesticide

residues

in

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT different sizes and different capping ligands, Colloids Surf. B Biointerfaces 58 (2007) 3-7.

486

[34] X. Zhang, M.R. Servos, J. Liu, Ultrahigh nanoparticle stability against salt, pH, and

487

solvent with retained surface accessibility via depletion stabilization, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 134

488

(2012) 9910-9913.

489

[35] J.J. Storhoff, R. Elghanian, C.A. Mirkin, R.L. Letsinger, Sequence-dependent stability of

490

DNA-modified gold nanoparticles, Langmuir 18 (2002) 6666-6670.

491

[36] H. Kimura-Suda, D.Y. Petrovykh, M.J. Tarlov, L.J. Whitman, Base-dependent

492

competitive adsorption of single-stranded DNA on gold, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 125 (2003)

493

9014-9015.

494

[37] L.K. Wolf, Y. Gao, R.M. Georgiadis, Sequence-dependent DNA immobilization: specific

495

versus nonspecific contributions, Langmuir 20 (2004) 3357-3361.

496

[38] X. Yan, H. Shi, M. Wang, Development of an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for

497

the simultaneous determination of parathion and imidacloprid, Anal. Methods 4 (2012) 4053.

498

[39] Z. Li, R. Jin, C.A. Mirkin, R.L. Letsinger, Multiple thiol-anchor capped DNA–gold

499

nanoparticle conjugates, Nucleic Acids Res. 30 (2002) 1558-1562.

500

[40] M. Jin, H. Shao, F. Jin, W. Gui, X. Shi, J. Wang, G. Zhu, Enhanced competitive

501

chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay for the trace detection of insecticide triazophos, J.

502

Food Sci. 77 (2012) T99-T104.

503

[41] Z.L. Xu, Q. Wang, H.T. Lei, S.A. Eremin, Y.D. Shen, H. Wang, R.C. Beier, J.Y. Yang,

504

K.A. Maksimova, Y.M. Sun, A simple, rapid and high-throughput fluorescence polarization

505

immunoassay for simultaneous detection of organophosphorus pesticides in vegetable and

506

environmental water samples, Anal. Chim. Acta 708 (2011) 123-129.

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

485

23

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT [42] Y. Guo, J. Tian, C. Liang, G. Zhu, W. Gui, Multiplex bead-array competitive

508

immunoassay for simultaneous detection of three pesticides in vegetables, Microchim. Acta

509

180 (2013) 387-395.

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

507

24

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Scheme 1 (A) Schematic illustration of the AuNP probes preparation. (B) Schematic illustration of the established competitive fluorescence bio-barcode immunoassay for

RI PT

pesticide detection.

Fig. 1 Characterization of AuNP probes. (A) The UV-Vis spectrum of bare AuNPs (black line), AuNPs modified with antibodies (red line), and AuNPs modified with

SC

antibodies and ssDNA (blue line), (B) TEM image of bare AuNPs, and (C) TEM

M AN U

image of modified AuNP probes.

Fig. 2 (A) The effects of spacer length on fluorescence intensity and number of ssDNAs labeled on one AuNP probe, and (B) The fluorescence intensity and number

was 0.625 mg L -1.

TE D

of ssDNAs of different ligand length on each AuNP probe; the hapten concentration

EP

Fig. 3 Optimization of methanol concentration; the black, red, and blue lines represent

AC C

the IC50, IC10, and ratio of maximal fluorescence to IC50 (Fmax/IC50) of the standard curve, respectively.

Fig. 4 The standard curve of triazophos; the linear range was 0.01–20 µg L-1; three replicates were performed.

25

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 1 Sequence of oligonucleotides used in the present work.

CAGCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGCAAA TTTTTGCAGCAGCAGCAGCAGCAAA TTTTTTTTTTAGCAGCAGCAGCAAA TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTCAGCAGCAAA TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTGCAAA TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTTTTTTT TTTTTTTTTT TTTTT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10

Sequence from 5′ to 3′

RI PT

Sequence number

26

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 2. Optimized working concentrations of OVA-hapten and antibody adsorbed on the AuNPs surface.

Hapten (mg L-1)

IC50 (µg L-1)

IC10 (µg L-1)

Fmax/IC50

Antibody (mg L-1)

Antibody (mg L-1)

Antibody (mg L-1)

2.23

1.12

4.46

2.23

1.12

4.46

2.23

1.12

0.63

1.19

0.78

0.57

0.19

0.10

0.06

1215.80

764.62

529.91

0.31

0.67

0.90

0.53

0.08

0.12

0.04

2257.47

482.16

468.40

0.16

0.49

0.26

0.54

0.05

0.01

0.05

2660.98

3719.72

408.28

0.08

0.91

0.67

1.0

0.25

0.24

1544.06

1921.90

439.82

SC

RI PT

4.46

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

0.31

27

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 3. Cross-reactivities (CR%) between triazophos and structural analogues IC50 (µg L-1)

CR (%)

Triazophos

0.25

100

Chlorpyrifos

>2000

Structure

SC

RI PT

Analogues

>2000

M AN U

Chlorpyrifos methyl

Parathion

<0.01

>2000

<0.01

>2000

<0.01

>2000

<0.01

>2000

<0.01

TE D

Malathion

<0.01

AC C

EP

Diazinon

Fenitrothion

28

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 4 Recoveries and relative standard deviations (RSDs) of the bio-barcode immunoassay, ELISA, and LC-MS/MS

Cabbage

Apple

LC-MS/MS

5.0 10.0 50.0 5.0 10.0 50.0 5.0 10.0 50.0 5.0 10.0 50.0 5.0

91.6/17.4 95.3/15.2 102.6/11.1 88.0/10.5 86.8/13.3 90.2/10.6 99.5/13.4 104.7/12.1 92.2/10.6 103.1/10.8 110.3/15.6 107.2/9.4 85.0/10.8

92.7/7.7 98.4/8.2 91.2/9.6 84.9/8.2 90.0/9.7 87.7/7.8 91.7/12.0 88.6/9.3 87.3/6.8 87.2/12.4 87.1/8.0 86.9/6.4 86.3/13.2

98.2/1.1 96.1/0.4 97.0/0.8 88.0/1.2 91.1/0.6 97.3/1.2 87.1/1.0 89.8/1.0 96.1/1.7 96.5/1.3 100.2/1.3 107.7/1.7 98.2/2.1

10.0

96.9/10.4

87.6/9.1

95.1/0.6

50.0

88.2/12.6

89.5/6.4

94.9/0.1

SC

RI PT

ELISA

M AN U

Cucumber

This method

TE D

Rice

Recoveries/RSD (%)

EP

Water

Spiking concentration (µg kg-1)

AC C

Sample

29

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT Table 5. Regression lines for the fluorescence bio-barcode amplification immunoassay and LC-MS/MS, performed using origin 9.0 at a confidence level of 95%. R2a

Water Rice Cucumber Cabbage Apple

y = 1.0824 x - 0.7413 y = 0.9233 x + 0.3631 y = 0.9262 x + 1.5636 y = 0.9845 x + 0.8142 y = 0.9320 x + 0.2323

0.9794 0.9758 0.9783 0.9841 0.9709

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

Correlation coefficient

RI PT

Regression equation

AC C

a

Samples

30

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

RI PT

Table 6 Comparison of various immunoassays Pattern Method

Sample Solid carrier

FPIAb

Black 96 well plates

96-well Multiscreen HTS

c

BA-IA

plates

Chemiluminometric/Chemilu

HRP-luminol-H2O2 system

minescent detector

Direct competition,

Fluorescence polarization

Water, cowpea,

fluorescein-labeled antigen

values/Multilabel counter

leek

Fluorescence/Bio-Plex

Cabbage,

suspension array reader

carrot, spinach

Indirect competitive, R-PE-conjugated the second antibody Indirect competitive, bio-barcode

d

BBC-IA

magnetic nanoparticles

modified AuNPs probe, PCR

BBC-CIA

magnetic nanoparticles

modified with HPR-labeled bio-barcode, hybridization

EP

Indirect competitive, AuNPs probe

CFBBCIA

Black 96 well plates

modified with FAM-labeled bio-barcode

Absorbance/Microplate reader

AC C

Indirect competitive, AuNPs, probe f

LOD (µg L-1)

100.7

19.8

0.04-5

0.063

[40]

5-10 min

103.1

10.1

16.09-512

5.860

[41]

2h

84.5

12.3

0.02-50

0.024

[42]

80 min

89.5

15.5

0.04-10

0.020

[25]

45 min

92.1

14.0

0.015-40

0.014

[26]

2.5 h

96.1

12.3

0.01-20

0.006

75 min

Ref.

carrot, water, soil

CT value/Real-time PCR

amplification e

SC

White 96 well plates

Linear range (µg L-1)

Recovery (%)

Lettuce, apple,

Direct competition,

M AN U

CLISA

Signal/Instrument

TE D

a

Scheme

RSD (%)

Analysis time

Fluorescence/ Microplate reader

Apple, cabbage, orange, rice

Apple, cabbage, orange, rice Water, rice, cucumber, apple, cabbage

a

Chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay. b Fluorescent polarization immunoassay. c Bead-array competitive immunoassay.d Bio-barcode amplifcation immunoassay.

e

Colorimetric immunoassay based on bio-barcod. f Competitive fluorescence bio-barcode immunoassay

31

This work

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

AC C

EP

TE D

M AN U

SC

RI PT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

ACCEPTED MANUSCRIPT

Highlights •

We report a simple and sensitive immunoassay for small molecule detection The effects of spacer length and ligand length on bio-barcode coverage on AuNPs surface were studied



Based on competitive binding and bio-barcoded multi-modified gold

SC

nanoparticles

The immunoassay was comparable to conventional methods in sensitivity

AC C

EP

TE D

and accuracy

M AN U



RI PT