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Site-Directed Electrochemical Grafting for Amplified Detection of Antibody Pharmaceuticals

Jianwen Wan, Yiyan Tian, Di Wu, Zhuojun Ye, Songmin Chen, Qiong Hu, Mengge Wang, Junpeng Lv, Wenhui Xu, Xiyao Zhang, Dongxue Han, Li Niu

2024Analytical Chemistry15 citationsDOI

Abstract

Antibody pharmaceuticals have become the most popular immunotherapeutic drugs and are often administered with low serum drug dosages. Hence, the development of a highly sensitive method for the quantitative assay of antibody levels is of great importance to individualized therapy. On the basis of the dual signal amplification by the glycan-initiated site-directed electrochemical grafting of polymer chains (glyGPC), we report herein a novel strategy for the amplified electrochemical detection of antibody pharmaceuticals. The target of interest was affinity captured by a DNA aptamer ligand, and then the glycans of antibody pharmaceuticals were decorated with the alkyl halide initiators (AHIs) via boronate cross-linking, followed by the electrochemical grafting of the ferrocenyl polymer chains from the glycans of antibody pharmaceuticals through the electrochemically controlled atom transfer radical polymerization (eATRP). As the glycans can be decorated with multiple AHIs and the grafted polymer chains are composed of tens to hundreds of electroactive tags, the glyGPC-based strategy permits the dually amplified electrochemical detection of antibody pharmaceuticals. In the presence of trastuzumab (Herceptin) as the target, the glyGPC-based strategy achieved a detection limit of 71.5 pg/mL. Moreover, the developed method is highly selective, and the results of the quantitative assay of trastuzumab levels in human serum are satisfactory. Owing to its uncomplicated operation and cost-effectiveness, the glyGPC-based strategy shows great promise in the amplified electrochemical detection of antibody pharmaceuticals.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryCombinatorial chemistryDetection limitGraftingElectrochemistryAntibodyGlycanAptamerImmunoassayPolymerChromatographyMolecular biologyBiochemistryOrganic chemistryElectrodeGlycoproteinPhysical chemistryBiologyImmunologyAdvanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniquesAdvanced Biosensing Techniques and ApplicationsMolecular Junctions and Nanostructures