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Holographic Immunoassays: Direct Detection of Antibodies Binding to Colloidal Spheres

ORAL

Abstract

The size of a probe bead reported by holographic particle characterization depends on the proportion of the surface area covered by bound target molecules and so can be used as an assay for molecular binding. We validate this technique by measuring the binding kinetics for the antibodies immunoglobulin G (IgG) and immunoglobulin M (IgM) as they attach to individual micrometer-diameter colloidal beads coated with protein A. These measurements yield the antibodies’ binding rates and can be inverted to obtain the concentration of antibodies in solution. Holographic molecular binding assays therefore can be used to perform fast quantitative immunoassays that are complementary to conventional serological tests.

Publication: K. Snyder, R. Quddus, A. D. Hollingsworth, K. Kirshenbaum and D. G. Grier. "Holographic immunoassays: direct detection of antibodies binding to colloidal spheres." Soft Matter 16, 10180–10186 (2020).

Presenters

  • Kaitlynn Snyder

    New York University (NYU)

Authors

  • Kaitlynn Snyder

    New York University (NYU)

  • David G Grier

    New York University (NYU)

  • Andrew D Hollingsworth

    New York Univ NYU

  • Rushna Quddus

    New York University, New York University (NYU)

  • Kent Kirshenbaum

    NYU