More than magnetic isolation: Dynabeads as strong Raman reporters toward simultaneous capture and identification of targets

Author:

Lee Jongwan1ORCID,McDonald Marissa2ORCID,Mhlanga Nikiwe1,Kang Jeon Woong3,Karnik Rohit1ORCID,Tadesse Loza F.145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical Engineering MIT Cambridge Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Health Sciences & Technology MIT Cambridge Massachusetts USA

3. Laser Biomedical Research Center, G. R. Harrison Spectroscopy Laboratory MIT Cambridge Massachusetts USA

4. Ragon Institute of Massachusetts General Hospital MIT and Harvard Cambridge Massachusetts USA

5. Jameel Clinic for AI & Healthcare MIT Cambridge Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractDynabeads are superparamagnetic particles used for the immunomagnetic purification of cells and biomolecules. Post‐capture, however, target identification relies on tedious culturing, fluorescence staining, and/or target amplification. Raman spectroscopy presents a rapid detection alternative, but current implementations target cells themselves with weak Raman signals. We present antibody‐coated Dynabeads as strong Raman reporter labels whose effect can be considered a Raman parallel of immunofluorescent probes. Recent developments in techniques for separating target‐bound Dynabeads from unbound Dynabeads make such an implementation feasible with high specificity. We deploy Dynabeads anti‐Salmonella to bind and identify Salmonella enterica, a major foodborne pathogen. Dynabeads present major peaks around 1000 and 1600 cm−1 from aliphatic and aromatic C‐C stretching of the polystyrene coating and near 1350 cm−1 from the ɣ‐Fe2O3 and Fe3O4 core, confirmed with electron dispersive X‐ray (EDX) imaging. Minor to no contributions are made from the surface antibodies themselves as confirmed by Raman analysis of surface‐activated, antibody‐free beads. Dynabeads' Raman signature can be measured in dry and liquid samples even at single shot ~30 × 30 μm area imaging using 0.5 s, 7‐mW laser acquisition with single and clustered beads providing a 44‐ and 68‐fold larger Raman intensity compared with the signature from cells. Higher polystyrene and iron oxide content in clusters yields larger signal intensity, and conjugation to bacteria strengthens clustering as a bacterium can bind to more than one bead as observed via transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Our findings shed light on the intrinsic Raman reporter nature of Dynabeads. When combined with emerging techniques for the separation of target‐bound Dynabeads from unbound Dynabeads such as using centrifugation through a density media bilayer, they have the potential to demonstrate their dual function for target isolation and detection without tedious staining steps or unique plasmonic substrate engineering, advancing their applications in heterogeneous samples like food, water, and blood.

Funder

National Cancer Institute

Abdul Latif Jameel Water and Food Systems Lab, Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Spectroscopy,General Materials Science

Reference27 articles.

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