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Improving Sensitivity and Specificity of Amyloid-β Peptides and Tau Protein Detection with Antibiofouling Magnetic Nanoparticles for Liquid Biopsy of Alzheimer's Disease

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Date 2021 Jan 6
PMID 33405741
Citations 11
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Abstract

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a growing global healthcare burden affecting the aging population and society. Given the lack of effective treatment to AD, early detection at the prodromal stage and timely monitoring of changes during progression are considered the best approach to control and intervene in disease progression. "Liquid biopsy" of AD biomarkers amyloid-β peptides (Aβs) and tau proteins in the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) or blood samples holds great promises for cost-effective, widely accessible, and easy-administrated noninvasive detection and follow-up of AD. However, current detection methods have not yet demonstrated sufficient sensitivity and specificity using neither Aβs nor tau proteins biomarkers. One major challenge of accurate detection and measurement of biomarker levels in biofluidic samples is the biofouling effect with nonspecific adsorption of unwanted biomolecules, such as various serum proteins, on the surface of targeted detecting agents or devices, causing false-positive and false-negative findings. In this study, antibiofouling polymer polyethylene glycol--allyl glycidyl ether (PEG--AGE) coated magnetic iron oxide nanoparticles (IONPs) capable of suppressing the nonspecific interactions with biomolecules, especially proteins, were investigated for the immunomagnetic capturing of Aβ40 and Aβ42 peptides and tau protein spiked in CSF- and serum-mimicking samples using corresponding antibodies conjugated as targeting ligands. Antibody-conjugated antibiofouling IONPs demonstrated improved specificity (>90%) and sensitivity (>95%) over those of antibody-conjugated magnetic micron beads (Dynabeads, ∼50% specificity and 30-40% sensitivity) widely used as magnetic separating agents under the same experimental conditions with the presence of nontargeted interfering proteins. The antibody-conjugated IONPs also exhibited significantly higher sensitivities (80-90%) and better performance of capturing Aβs and tau protein from the human whole blood samples than antibody-conjugated Dynabeads (∼20%).

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