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  • An immunosensor for parasite lactate dehydrogenase detection as a malaria biomarker - Comparison with commercial test kit.

An immunosensor for parasite lactate dehydrogenase detection as a malaria biomarker - Comparison with commercial test kit.

Talanta (2018-06-02)
Aver Hemben, Jon Ashley, Ibtisam E Tothill
RESUMO

This paper describes the development of an affinity sensor for the detection of Plasmodium falciparum parasite lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH) as one of the biomarkers used for malaria detection. The gold sensor was functionalised with anti-pLDH after cleaning the electrode surface to remove impurities (120 °C, 1 h). The sensor was then treated to block unreacted groups on the surface and minimise matrix interference, before applying it in a sandwich assay to detect pLDH in buffer samples using a dose concentration assay. The sensor was optimised to achieve the best detection sensitivity before using it for pLDH detection in serum samples. The developed sensor achieved a limit of detection (LOD) of 1.80 ng mL-1 and 0.70 ng mL-1 for the detection of pLDH in buffer and in serum samples respectively. The sensor sensitivity was enhanced further with the use of AuNP conjugated to the detection anti-pLDH-enzyme, achieving an LOD of 19 pg mL-1 in buffer and 23 pg mL-1 in serum samples. The performance of the sensor was compared to commercially available Plasmodium immunochromatographic (ICT) malaria kits. The developed sensor was able to detect pLDH in the Dd2luc culture medium supernatant at 0.002% parasitaemia without the use of AuNP signal enhancement when compared to the OptiMAL-IT ICT kit (detect pLDH) and the BinaxNOW ICT kit (detection of both pLDH and PfHRP 2) samples. Therefore, the sensor developed in this work is highly sensitive and can be used for pLDH detection for on-site diagnosis of malaria. A cheap and simple device as developed in this work is required to tackle malaria detection.

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Soro humano, from platelet poor human plasma, sterile-filtered, (mycoplasma tested, virus tested)