Abstract

Direct measurement of time-resolved fluorescence from a washed surface of an immunoassay well constitutes an advantage compared with label development options involving signal generation in solution. Epi-fluorometric detection collects the signal from only a small part of the microtiter well's bottom surface and it is inadequate for the optimal assay sensitivity when using binding surfaces introduced by large coating volume. This study reports on the use of streptavidin-coated spots intended to condense the binding of the labeled antibodies to coincide with the excitation beam. The spots were generated in special microtiter wells containing 2.5-mm, 3.5-mm, and 4.5-mm diameter indentations by adsorption from liquid droplets containing either native (SAv) or modified high-capacity (GA-SAv) streptavidin. The SAv-coated and GA-SAv-coated spots exhibited maximum Eu-biotin binding densities of 0.080 and 0.47 pmol/mm(2), respectively. A sandwich-type immunoassay of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) provided a fivefold to sixfold increase in the signal-to-background ratios of the spot assay and an equivalent improvement in the detection limit (DL < 0.01 mU/L) compared with a reference assay.

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