Abstract

The photothermal effect shows significant promise for various biomedical applications but is rarely exploited for microfluidic lab-on-a-chip bioassays. Herein, a photothermal bar-chart microfluidic immunosensing chip, with the integration of the conventional 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB)-probed enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA)-like system, was developed based on exploiting the photothermal pumping technique for visual bar-chart microfluidic immunosensing. Both the sandwich ELISA-like system and the photothermal pumping protocol were integrated into a single photothermal bar-chart chip. On-chip immunocaptured iron oxide nanoparticles catalyzed the oxidation of the chromogenic substrate, TMB, to produce a sensitive photothermal and chromogenic dual-functional probe, oxidized TMB. As the result of heat generation and the subsequent production of elevating vapor pressure in the sealed microfluidic environment, the on-chip near-infrared laser-driven photothermal effect of the probe served as a dose-dependent pumping force to drive the multiplexed quantitative display of the immunosensing signals as visual dye bar charts. Prostate-specific antigen as a model analyte was tested at a limit of detection of 1.9 ng·mL-1, lower than the clinical diagnostic threshold of prostate cancer. This work presents a new perspective for microfluidic integration and multiplexed quantitative bar-chart visualization of the conventional TMB-probed ELISA signals possibly by means of an affordable handheld laser pointer in a lab-on-a-chip format.

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