Modular Aptamer Switches for the Continuous Optical Detection of Small‐Molecule Analytes in Complex Media

Author:

Hariri Amani A.1,Cartwright Alyssa P.2ORCID,Dory Constantin2,Gidi Yasser1ORCID,Yee Steven2,Thompson Ian A. P.2ORCID,Fu Kaiyu X.12,Yang Kiyoul2,Wu Diana3,Maganzini Nicolò2,Feagin Trevor1,Young Brian E.1,Afshar Behrad Habib2,Eisenstein Michael1,Digonnet Michel J. F.2,Vuckovic Jelena2,Soh H. Tom1234ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

2. Department of Electrical Engineering Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

3. Department of Bioengineering Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

4. Department of Chemical Engineering Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

Abstract

AbstractAptamers are a promising class of affinity reagents because signal transduction mechanisms can be built into the reagent, so that they can directly produce a physically measurable output signal upon target binding. However, endowing the signal transduction functionality into an aptamer remains a trial‐and‐error process that can compromise its affinity or specificity and typically requires knowledge of the ligand binding domain or its structure. In this work, a design architecture that can convert an existing aptamer into a “reversible aptamer switch” whose kinetic and thermodynamic properties can be tuned without a priori knowledge of the ligand binding domain or its structure is described. Finally, by combining these aptamer switches with evanescent‐field‐based optical detection hardware that minimizes sample autofluorescence, this study demonstrates the first optical biosensor system that can continuously measure multiple biomarkers (dopamine and cortisol) in complex samples (artificial cerebrospinal fluid and undiluted plasma) with second and subsecond‐scale time responses at physiologically relevant concentration ranges.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Leona M. and Harry B. Helmsley Charitable Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,General Materials Science

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