Smartphone-enabled optofluidic exosome diagnostic for concussion recovery

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Abstract

A major impediment to improving the treatment of concussion is our current inability to identify patients that will experience persistent problems after the injury. Recently, brain-derived exosomes, which cross the blood-brain barrier and circulate following injury, have shown great potential as a noninvasive biomarker of brain recovery. However, clinical use of exosomes has been constrained by their small size (30-100 nm) and the extensive sample preparation (>24 hr) needed for traditional exosome measurements. To address these challenges, we developed a smartphone-enabled optofluidic platform to measure brain-derived exosomes. Sample-to-answer on our chip is 1 hour, 10x faster than conventional techniques. The key innovation is an optofluidic device that can detect enzyme amplified exosome biomarkers, and is read out using a smartphone camera. Using this approach, we detected and profiled GluR2+ exosomes in the post-injury state using both in vitro and murine models of concussion.

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Ko, J., Hemphill, M. A., Gabrieli, D., Wu, L., Yelleswarapu, V., Lawrence, G., … Issadore, D. (2016). Smartphone-enabled optofluidic exosome diagnostic for concussion recovery. Scientific Reports, 6. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep31215

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