Colorimetric Urinalysis for On-Site Detection of Metabolic Biomarkers

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Date

2020

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Volume Title

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Open Access Color

Green Open Access

Yes

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No
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Top 10%
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Abstract

Over the past few decades, colorimetric assays have been developed for cost-effective and rapid on-site urinalysis. Most of these assays were employed for detection of biomarkers such as glucose, uric acid, ions, and albumin that are abundant in urine at micromolar to millimolar levels. In contrast, direct assaying of urinary biomarkers such as glycated proteins, low-molecular-weight reactive oxygen species, and nucleic acids that are present at significantly lower levels (nanomolar to picomolar) remain challenging due to the interferences from the urine sample matrix. State-of-the-art assays for detection of trace amounts of urinary biomarkers typically utilize time-consuming and equipment-dependent sample pretreatment or clean-up protocols prior to assaying, which limits their applicability for on-site analysis. Herein, we report a colorimetric assay for on-site detection of trace amount of generic biomarkers in urine without involving tedious sample pretreatment protocols. The detection strategy is based on monitoring the changes in optical properties of poly(3-(4-methyl-3'-thienyloxy)propyltriethylammonium bromide) upon interacting with an aptamer or a peptide nucleic acid in the presence and absence of target biomarkers of relevance for the diagnosis of metabolic complications and diabetes. As a proof of concept, this study demonstrates facile assaying of advanced glycation end products, 8-hydroxy-2'-deoxyguanosine and hepatitis B virus DNA in urine samples at clinically relevant concentrations, with limits of detection of similar to 850 pM, similar to 650 pM, and similar to 1 nM, respectively. These analytes represent three distinct classes of biomarkers: (i) glycated proteins, (ii) low-molecular-weight reactive oxygen species, and (iii) nucleic acids. Hence, the proposed methodology is applicable for rapid detection of generic biomarkers in urine, without involving sophisticated equipment and skilled personnel, thereby enabling on-site urinalysis. At the end of the contribution, we discuss the opportunity to translate the homogeneous assay into a paper-based format.

Description

PubMed: 32551533

Keywords

urinalysis, colorimetric assay, aptamer, on-site assaying, polythiophene, sample pretreatment, :Materials [Engineering], Polymers, Biosensing Techniques, Thiophenes, Urinalysis, Limit of Detection, Humans, Colorimetry, Colorimetric Assay, Biomarkers

Fields of Science

02 engineering and technology, 01 natural sciences, 0104 chemical sciences, 0210 nano-technology

Citation

WoS Q

Q1

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Q1
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OpenCitations Citation Count
37

Source

ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces

Volume

12

Issue

28

Start Page

31270

End Page

31281
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CrossRef : 18

Scopus : 41

PubMed : 5

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41

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40

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Page Views

1849

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4

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