thrombin-aptamer and phosphorodithioic-acid

thrombin-aptamer has been researched along with phosphorodithioic-acid* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for thrombin-aptamer and phosphorodithioic-acid

ArticleYear
A sensitive thrombin-linked sandwich immunoassay for protein targets using high affinity phosphorodithioate modified aptamer for thrombin labeling.
    Talanta, 2020, Jan-15, Volume: 207

    Thrombin and its aptamers have been well studied and widely used as models in aptamer based assays and sensors. Here we reported a thrombin-linked sandwich immunoassay for proteins to demonstrate new applications of thrombin and the aptamers, converting protein detection to analysis of thrombin label. In this assay, target protein was sandwiched by the capture antibody on a microplate and the biotinylated detection antibody. Thrombin bound to one biotinylated aptamer, and then the thrombin-labeled aptamer was attached on the sandwich complex through streptavidin-biotin interaction by using streptavidin as a linker. Thrombin catalyzed cleavage of fluorogenic peptide substrates, generating fluorescence signals for target detection. Among a few different anti-thrombin aptamers, the use of one nuclease resistant RNA aptamer having phosphorodithioate (PS2) modification on a specific backbone position enabled higher assay sensitivity due to its much higher affinity. This thrombin-linked sandwich immunoassay allowed detection of prostate-specific antigen (PSA) at 2 pM, an important protein related cancer disease, with high sensitivity and specificity. The strategy was general, and also enabled sensitive detection of botulinum neurotoxin type A (BoNTA) light chain, one toxin protein causing risk to human health. This assay combines advantages of antibody recognition, aptamer affinity labeling, high affinity of aptamers, and enzyme activity of thrombin. Labeling thrombin on the immunosandwich complex through simple affinity binding overcomes limitations of covalent conjugating enzyme on antibody in conventional immunoassay. This assay is promising in applications for protein detection.

    Topics: Aptamers, Nucleotide; Biosensing Techniques; Feasibility Studies; Humans; Immunoassay; Limit of Detection; Phosphates; Prostate-Specific Antigen; Proteins

2020