4.8 Article

Wavelengths and Lifetimes of Paper Autofluorescence: A Simple Substrate Screening Process to Enhance the Sensitivity of Fluorescence-Based Assays in Paper

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 89, Issue 22, Pages 12023-12029

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.7b02424

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAGER-1450187, DGE-1256082, ECC-1542101]
  2. Defense Threat Reduction Agency [HDTRA1-16-C-0029]
  3. University of Washington College of Engineering Dean's Fellowship
  4. University of Washington
  5. Molecular Engineering and Sciences Institute
  6. Clean Energy Institute
  7. National Institutes of Health
  8. Div Of Chem, Bioeng, Env, & Transp Sys
  9. Directorate For Engineering [1450187] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Porous media made of nitrocellulose and glass fiber are common paper substrates for lateral flow assays, microfluidic paper analytical devices and other point-of-care diagnostic assays. Such assays commonly use optical labels such as gold nano particles, latex beads, or fluorescent nanoparticles to visualize the presence of analytes. Fluorescent labels are commonly used in bioassays to enhance sensitivity, but autoluminescence of the paper substrate worsens signal-to-noise ratios of fluorescence based assays. To date, there exists no systematic investigation of autoluminescence wavelengths or lifetimes of porous membranes used in lateral flow assays. In response, we quantified the autoluminescence of commonly used porous materials across the visible spectrum via excitation emission spectroscopy and time resolved fluorescence spectroscopy, and demonstrate that autoluminescence is solely due to autofluorescence with lifetimes of about 5 ns in the visible spectrum. Counterintuitively, we found that spectroscopy alone does not provide sufficient information to select candidate paper substrates for fluorophore-labeled assays. Therefore, we developed a simple quantitative framework to select a low-fluorescence substrate that minimizes both the overlap of paper and fluorophore emission spectra and the fluorescence intensity on an imaging system of interest (such as a gel imager). Use of this framework was shown to lower the limit of detection of an influenza A nucleoprotein immunoassay by over 50%. The tools developed in this manuscript enable assay developers to screen appropriate, low-fluorescence porous substrates and enhance the sensitivity of membrane-based fluorescence assays.

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