4.8 Article

Luminescent lanthanide nanoparticle-based imaging enables ultra-sensitive, quantitative and multiplexed in vitro lateral flow immunoassays

Journal

NANOSCALE
Volume 13, Issue 35, Pages 14814-14824

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1nr03358a

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Agence Innovation Defense (AID) grant SPIDERMAP
  2. SATT ParisSaclay project NLISA
  3. l'Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-11EQPX-0029, ANR-10-INBS-04, ANR-11-IDEX-0003-02]

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The use of lanthanide-doped nanoparticles as luminescent LFA probes offers higher sensitivity and measurement accuracy for detecting various biomolecules, including enterotoxins. Compared to gold nanoparticle-based LFAs, this method shows at least an order of magnitude improvement in analytical sensitivity and enables simultaneous quantitative detection of multiple biological toxins.
Lateral Flow Assays (LFAs) have been extensively used on-site to rapidly detect analytes, possibly in complex media. However, standard gold nanoparticle-based LFAs lack sensitivity and cannot provide quantitative measurements with high accuracy. To overcome these limitations, we image lanthanide-doped nanoparticles (YVO4:Eu 40%) as new luminescent LFA probes, using a homemade reader coupled to a smartphone and propose an original image analysis allowing strip quantification regardless of the shape of the test band signal. This method is demonstrated for the detection of staphylococcal enterotoxins SEA, SEG, SEH, and SEI. A systematic comparison to state-of-the-art gold nanoparticle-based LFA revealed an analytical sensitivity enhancement of at least one order of magnitude. We furthermore provided measurements of absolute toxin concentration over two orders of magnitude and demonstrated simultaneous quantitative detection of multiple toxins with unaltered sensitivity. In particular, we reached concentrations 100 times lower than the ones reported in the literature for on-site multiplexed LFA targeting enterotoxins. Altogether, these results highlight that our luminescent nanoparticle-based method provides a powerful and versatile on-site framework to detect multiple biomolecules with sensitivity approaching that obtained by ELISA. This paves the way to a change of paradigm in the field of analytical immunoassays by providing fast in situ quantitative high sensitivity detection of biomarkers or pathogens.

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