Robust technology is required to underpin rapid point-of-care and in-field diagnostics to improve timely decision making across broad sectors. An attractive strategy combines target recognition and signal generating elements into an "active" enzyme-switch that directly transduces target-binding into a signal. However, approaches that are broadly applicable to diverse targets remain elusive. Here, an enzyme-inhibitor switch sensor was developed by insertion of non-immunoglobulin Affimer binding proteins, between TEM1-β-lactamase and its inhibitor protein, such that target binding disrupts the enzyme-inhibitor complex. Design principles for a successful switch architecture are illustrated by the rapid (min), simple (wash-free), and sensitive (pM) quantification of multimeric target analytes in biological samples (serum, plasma, leaf extracts), across three application areas. A therapeutic antibody (Herceptin), protein biomarker (human C-reactive protein), and plant virus (cow pea mosaic virus) were targeted, demonstrating assays for therapeutic drug monitoring, health diagnostics, and plant pathogen detection, respectively. Batch-to-batch reproducibility, shelf-life stability, and consistency with validated enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay analysis confirm that the principle of an Affimer-enzyme-inhibitor switch provides a platform for point-of-care and in-field diagnostics.
CITATION STYLE
Adamson, H., Ajayi, M. O., Campbell, E., Brachi, E., Tiede, C., Tang, A. A., … Jeuken, L. J. C. (2019). Affimer-Enzyme-Inhibitor Switch Sensor for Rapid Wash-free Assays of Multimeric Proteins. ACS Sensors, 4(11), 3014–3022. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.9b01574
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