Issue 10, 2021

An integrated self-powered 3D printed sample concentrator for highly sensitive molecular detection of HIV in whole blood at the point of care

Abstract

Rapid and efficient biological sample preparation and pretreatment are crucial for highly sensitive, reliable and reproducible molecular detection of infectious diseases. Herein, we report a self-powered, integrated sample concentrator (SPISC) for rapid plasma separation, pathogen lysis, nucleic acid trapping and enrichment at the point of care. The proposed sample concentrator uses a combination of gravitational sedimentation of blood cells and capillary force for rapid, self-powered plasma separation. The pathogens (e.g., HIV virus) in separated plasma were directly lysed and pathogen nucleic acid was enriched by an integrated, flow-through FTA® membrane in the concentrator, enabling highly efficient nucleic acid preparation. The FTA® membrane of the SPISC is easy to store and transport at room temperature without need for uninterrupted cold chain, which is crucial for point of care sampling in resource-limited settings. The platform has been successfully applied to detect HIV virus in blood samples. Our experiments show that the sample concentrator can achieve a plasma separation efficiency as high as 95% and a detection sensitivity as low as 10 copies per 200 μL blood (∼100 copies per mL plasma) with variability less than 7%. The sample concentrator described is fully compatible with downstream nucleic acid detection and has great potential for early diagnostics, monitoring and management of infectious diseases at the point of care.

Graphical abstract: An integrated self-powered 3D printed sample concentrator for highly sensitive molecular detection of HIV in whole blood at the point of care

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
30 Dec 2020
Accepted
29 Mar 2021
First published
30 Mar 2021

Analyst, 2021,146, 3234-3241

An integrated self-powered 3D printed sample concentrator for highly sensitive molecular detection of HIV in whole blood at the point of care

K. Kadimisetty, K. Yin, A. M. Roche, Y. Yi, F. D. Bushman, R. G. Collman, R. Gross, L. Feng and C. Liu, Analyst, 2021, 146, 3234 DOI: 10.1039/D0AN02482A

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