The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of...

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The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering, University of Toronto International Centre of Biodynamics Bucuresti, Romania July,

Transcript of The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of...

Page 1: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological

fluids Mike Thompson

Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

University of Toronto

International Centre of Biodynamics

Bucuresti, Romania July, 2010

Page 2: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Clinical and Biomarker Targets Province of Ontario

• 1 billion dollars annually for hospital and central lab assays (22 bd Provincial Budget)

• Many assays involve magnetic bead ELISA

• High level of automation but chemistry is often “old”

• Virtually no introduction of lab-on-a-chip or sensor technology

• Blood, urine and tissue are extremely difficult matrices

Page 3: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Label Free Detection Methods

• Transverse wave acoustic physics in the FIA liquid-phase mode –protein small-molecule interactions, neuron cell behavior, nucleic acid damage by oxidants

• Electromagnetic detection based on the propagation of ultra high frequency (1 GHz) acoustic physics

• Kelvin current detection in scanning format and time-dependant measurements over nucleic acids, proteins and neurons on substrates such as ITO

Page 4: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Topics

• Transverse wave acoustic physics as a sensor detection strategy - examples

• Ultra high frequency electromagnetic physics• Model probe attachment to EMPAS surface• Linker chemistry and minimization of the

pervasive NSB biosensor problem • Applications – preliminary work on the detection

of ovarian cancer and HIV in serum• Application – collaboration with UK MOD• Outline of work on scanning Kelvin detection

Page 5: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Viscous Liquid

Liquid

L, L

Rm Lm Cm

C0

Biolayer

Measure:fs – Energy storageRm – Energy dissipation

Page 6: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,
Page 7: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Frequency response for Tat-30 binding

0 2000 4000 60009000300

9000350

9000400

9000450

9000500

9000550

9000600

9000650

9000700

9000750

Tat-30

TAR

neutravidinfr

eque

ncy

(Hz)

time(s)

Page 8: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

0 1000 2000 3000 4000

-10

-5

0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

Tat-25

Tat-22

Tat-18

Tat-12

freq

uenc

y ch

ange

(Hz)

time(s)

Page 9: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Neuron culture in acoustic vibrational fields (TSM)

CO2

in

CO2

out

growth medium and or drugs in

growth medium and or drugs out

Microscopic image of neurons (N-38)

Metabolic line over 48hrs

2ml chamber for neuron growth

Page 10: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Cellular OscillationsCOHERENT SYNCHRONOUS SIGNAL OF 2 MINUTES PERIODICITY!

Page 11: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

EMPAS System Layout

Page 12: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Criteria for Protein or Aptamer Probe Attachment to Device

• Molecular assembly for reproducible surface – BUT?

• Si dioxide - silanization chemistry• High receptor site packing density• Capability for steric control of density• Simple bi-functionality allowing 100%

reaction with probe• Minimize or eliminate NSB in biological

fluids – blood, serum, urine

Page 13: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

General Probe Model

• Develop a new generation of linkers onto which thiol-containing biomolecules could immobilize in a subsequent step for the purpose of fabricating EMPAS biosensing interface– Biotin-avidin was chosen as a model system in order to test the

viability of our biosensor – Chemically modified biotin to yield a thiol group on its tail

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Page 14: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Alkyltrichlorosilane Linkers

• Trichlorosilyl tail shows strong affinity to quartz crystal– Forms a strong Si-O bond on the surface of quartz crystal

• The Head function can be modified to immobilize target biomolecules

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SiCl

Cl Cl

Page 15: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Thiosulfonate Chemistry

• Thiosulfonate was chosen as the head function – Known to react chemoselectively with thiols to form disulfide

bonds

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Gamblin, D. P.; Garnier, P.; Ward, S. J.; Oldham, N. J.; Fairbanks, A. J., and Davis, B. G. Org. Biomol. Chem. 2003, 1(21), 3642-3644.

S SR

O

O

R' + R'' SH R S S R'' + S

O

HO

R'

Page 16: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Trichlorosilyl Undecenyl Benzene ThioSulfonate (TUBTS)

• Synthesis

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Page 17: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

TUBTS SAM Formation: Time Trial

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Cleaned quartz crystal TUBTS SAM

OH OHOH OHSi

OSiO O

S

SiO

SiO

S

O O

TUBTSPhMe, rt, time

OO

SS

OO

SS

OO

SS

OO

Page 18: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Biotinthiol Immobilization: Time Trial

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TUBTS SAM

SiO

SiO O

S

SiO

SiO

S

O O

BiotinthiolMeOH, rt, time

OO

SS

OO

SS

OO

SS

OO

SiO

SiO O

S

SiO

SiOO O

S S S

Biotinthiol Biotinthiol Biotinthiol Biotinthiol

Biotinthiol functionalized TUBTS SAM

Page 19: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

XPS analysis for biotinthiol immobilization on TUBTS SAMs at various time

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XPS peak profile for N

N signal is unique to biotinthiol

S

NHHN

SH

O

Biotinthiol

Page 20: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Chemoselectivity of TUBTS SAM

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+ N. R.

OSiO

SS

OO

SiO

S

NHHN

O

BiotinOH

O

S

NHHN

O

BiotinolOH

S

NHHN

O

BiotinamineNH2

Page 21: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

An Example of EMPAS measurement

824.215

824.22

824.225

824.23

824.235

824.24

0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500 3000

Time (sec.)

Fre

qu

en

cy (

MH

z)

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Injection of 0.1 mg/mL avidin solution (50 µL)

Frequency shift of 17900 Hz

Page 22: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

EMPAS measurements for TUBTS SAM

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Specific to non-specific ratio – 1.5:1 Acceptable reproducibility

Page 23: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

OEG-TUBTS

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Synthesis

Page 24: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

OEG-TUBTS SAM

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OEG-TUBTS SAM

SiO

O

O

SiO O

O

O

O

S

SiO

SiO

S

O

O

O

O

O O

BiotinthiolMeOH (Et3N), rt, 2 h

OO

O

SS

OO

O

SS

OO

O

SS

OO

SiO

O

O

SiO O

O

O

O

SiO

SiO

O

O

O

O

O O

O O O

Biotinthiol Biotinthiol Biotinthiol Biotinthiol

Biotinthiol functionalized OEG-TUBTS SAM

S S S S

Page 25: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

EMPAS measurements for OEG-TUBTS SAM

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Specific to non-specific ratio – 1.75:1 High reproducibility

Page 26: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Incorporation of diluent• Next Step: Incorporation of a diluent molecule in our

system – A diluent - a shorter molecule used to space out the linker

within the SAM• Provides greater space for the analyte to interact with the

biosensing element

• Also attempted the biotinthiol immobilization under aqueous conditions

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Page 27: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

7-OEG

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Synthesis

OOH O

OF

SiCl

ClCl

7-OEG59%

O

F

F2 steps

Page 28: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM

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OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM

SiO

O

O

SiO O

O

O

O

SiO

SiO

S

O

O

O

O

O O

OO

O

SO

O

O

FF

F

O

FF

F

SS

Cleaned quartz crystal

OH OHOH OH

OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG

PhMe, rt, time

Page 29: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

EMPAS measurements for OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM

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Specific to non-specific ratio – 2:1 High reproducibility Immobilization under aqueous condition is possible

Page 30: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM formation on quartz crystal: Time Trial

0

20

40

60

80

100

0 30 60 90 120 150 180 210 240

Time (min)

Co

nta

ct A

ng

els

(deg

ree)

30

CAM and XPS values both continued to change after 120 min Indicated that the silanization process was not complete by 120 min

Page 31: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM formation on quartz crystal: Time Trial (cont’d)

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Closer look at the %F and %S in XPS analysis

Sulfur unique to OEG-TUBTS Fluorine unique to 7-OEG

Possible multilayer formation Dramatically decrease the biosensing

performance of our surface

Decreased the silanization time to 60 min to avoid multilayer formation

Page 32: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

EMPAS measurements for OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG SAM with reduced silanization time

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Specific to non-specific ratio – 15:1 High reproducibility

Page 33: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Conclusions for work on linker• Successfully prepared SAMs onto piezoelectric quartz crystals with new

thiosulfonate-based linkers

• Chemoselectively immobilized biotinthiol under aqueous conditions in a single, straightforward, reliable and coupling-free manner

• With OEG-TUBTS/7-OEG system, we demonstrated a 15-fold difference in signal response of EMPAS between specific and non-specific measurements for avidin interaction

• Same chemistry for device in goat serum spiked with avidin gives a 6-fold signal ratio – best we have ever observed

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Page 34: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

And what we have learned

• Proteins adsorb to hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces just about equally

• Modified optically flat surfaces with SAMs in place produce high NSB

• For steric reasons you need a receptor functioning in tandem with a surface diluent

• The linker chain length must be about 5 C longer than the diluent

• PEG functionality does reduce NSB very significantly• Receptor exclusion volume plays a crucial role

Page 35: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Ovarian CancerOverview

• Most serious gynaecologic cancer with ≈ 1700 deaths every year in Canada

• Cancer patients develop a mechanism to evade and suppress the immune system

• Ovarian cancer cells have reduced expression in signal transducing zeta chain molecules (e.g. CD3-zeta) reduced expression of T-cell receptor molecules ( and ) suppressed T-cell activation and proliferation reduced cytokine production and proliferative response

Page 36: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Ovarian Cancer

Cause

• Proteomic studies revealed an early pregnancy factor (EPF) in the serum and urine of pregnant women during the 1st and 2nd trimesters

• This EPF has been identified as a heat shock protein 10 (HSP10)

• Cancer cells were found to produce HSP10 and release it to the cytoplasm, extracellular ascites and peripheral blood

• HSP10 was associated with the reduction of T-cell CD3-zeta

expression and immunosuppression

Page 37: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

5) On-line Detection of HSP10: TSM Response

Possible indication of aptamer conformational change upon HSP10 binding

Page 38: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,
Page 39: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Detection of HIV Antibodies in Blood

• Screening test for HIV takes 3 drops of blood and effected in 2.5 minutes

• Commercial kits available in several countries such as China, India and Canada

• Confirmatory test for HIV requires positive detection of 10 Ab in blood

• Confirmation uses electrophoresis and blotting, 3 days and is costly

Page 40: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Towards Multiplexed HIV Ab Detection Using Acoustic Wave

Physics

• Develop flow-through label-free EMPAS electromagnetic system for diagnostic assays

• Attachment of probe (antigen/peptide) to device surface

• Surface chemistry to maximize analytical signal and minimize response for NSB (serum-blood?)

• Design engineer multiplexed system• Extend to replace ELISA approach to diagnostics

Page 41: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Clean quartz crystal

2) NaI, acetone, rt, 1.5h

O

Si

O

SiO

O

O

SiO

O

SiO

OOH OH OH OH

OO

I I

1) CATD/HTS (50/50 v/v)toluene, rt, 2h

Page 42: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

PBS buffer only

Injection of antibody solution

Return to buffer only flow

(rinse-off)

Frequency shift

Page 43: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Collaboration with UK MOD Porton Down

• MOD has developed rapid response SPR system for detection of bacteria/viruses

• Similar to diagnostics – based on Ab/aptamer probes on gold substrate

• Serious issue with interference of particles/non-specific binders

• Developed long-chain, PEG thiol linker

Page 44: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Principle of Scanning Kelvin nanoprobe

Lord KelvinLord Kelvin The original apparatus of Lord Kelvin The original apparatus of Lord Kelvin

Page 45: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

The Scanning Kelvin Nanoprobe is Based on the Measurement of the Local Work Function

Evacuum

1

1

2

2----

++++

1

2

eV

1

2

1 2 1

+

V0= -Vd

Two metals are separated by a distance d

At electrical contact, equalization of Fermi levels, surface charging, electron flow

Inclusion of a backing potential V0, null-field condition achieved when V0 = -V

Page 46: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Block Diagram of the Scanning Kelvin Nanoprobe

Vibrationpiezo

tipsampleinsulator Topography control

piezo

XY-scantable

Sample voltage

power supply

piezo driver signal generator2kHz

lock-in amp. 1

lock-in amp. 2

signal generator100kHz

NI BNC-2120 interface

CPD signal

topography signal

shielded cable

PC with LabViewNI PCI 6160 DAQ BoardC-842.20 DC Motor Controller

motorscontrol

Sum

circuit

Charge amplifier

pie

zo d

rive

r

Page 47: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

DNA Microarrays

Array map showing the exact position of duplicates and the number of mismatches

Surface potential image of the scanned oligonucleotide microarray

Page 48: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Protein Microarrays

Image of Rabbit IgG protein microarray (35 spots in a 7x5 grid) showing the dependency of work function level on the

protein abundance in different spots

Page 49: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

SKN

Page 50: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Mike Thompson Research Group 2010

• Jack Sheng Sumra Bokhari

• Sonia Sheikh Dr. Larisa Cheran

• Shilin Cheung Alin Cheran

• Elaine Chak Miguel Neves

• Kiril Fedorov Timothy Chung

• Pat Benvenuto

• Dr. Chris Blaszykowski

Page 51: The detection problem in biomarker analysis of biological fluids Mike Thompson Department of Chemistry and Institute for Biomaterials and Biomedical Engineering,

Thanks everyone, for listening to me!!

And a special thanks to Mihaela

[email protected]