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DNA capture using magnetic nanoparticles

Efficient methods for DNA detectionin clinical, environmental, and experimental samples are constantly in demand. In a clinical sample, DNA capture and identification can be essential to the diagnosis of disease. In public heath and environmental situations it can be used to identify contamination of food or water. DNA collection and characterization is constantly expanding our ability to answer experimental questions. DNA capture is a mainstay of modern biotechnology. Traditional techniques rely on affinity columns, centrifugation, and multiple washing steps. Newer methods are based on magnetic separation. In the beginning, magnetic separation was limitedto packing a column with magnetic material and running a solution through it. As nanotechnology evolved it became possible to use mobile solid support systems such as magnetic nanoparticles.

 

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Detection of foodborne pathogens using magnetic bead separation

When food becomes contaminated with pathogens it is necessary to identify the contamination and remove that food from the supply line as soon as possible. When that food is perishable it becomes all the more important to act quickly, but this demands a rapid detection system. This “need for speed” automatically eliminates the traditional culture method from the list of potential detection techniques. A commonly used method for pathogen detection is to isolate the pathogen and concentrate it enough to be accurately amplified and detected by real time quantitative polymerase chain reaction (RTqPCR). However, the method used to capture and concentrate the pathogen needs to be rapid and efficient. Magnetic nanoparticles and magnetic bead separation techniques are the perfect technologies for the rapid isolation and concentration of pathogens.

Free guide: The basic guide to scale-up biomagnetic separation processes

 

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Sandwich hybridization DNA/RNA capture using magnetic beads

The vision of a cheese sandwich is actually quite useful when trying to understand the sandwich hybridization technique. In this analogy the cheese represents the single strand (ss) target DNA or RNA. The bread represents the oligonucleotide probe. For each target there are two oligonucleotide probes. The probes are synthesized to be perfectly complementary to the ends of the target ssDNA or RNA. Therefore, during an incubation period each oligonucleotide probe will bind to its specific end of the target DNA: one at the 5’ end and one at the 3’ end.

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Using magnetic nanoparticles for molecular diagnosis of S. aureus

The bacteria Staphylococcus aureusis of major concern in modern healthcare.Once it spreads to a patient’s bloodstreamthe infection can lead to sepsis and death. Hospitalized patients are particularly vulnerable, especially those with weakened immune systems. Some strains of S. aureushavebegun to demonstrate antibiotic resistance. For these reasons it is important to identify and contain infection early; rapid detection of bacteria in patient sera is key. Traditional culture methods are time-consuming and require transportation of samples to offsite clinical laboratories.Development of a rapid point-of-care diagnostic tool is desirable, andthe magnetic nanoparticleis rapidly becoming the tool of choice.

Free PDF guide: "The Basic Guide  for Monitoring Biomagnetic Separation Processes"

First use biomagnetic separation to isolate the target molecule

Magnetic nanoparticles are fantastically customizable due to surface coatings and functional moieties, and are easily recoverable from solution. A functionalized nanoparticle will bind to its target after a short incubation time, and the conjugate can be isolated with the help of a magnetic separation rack. This technology allows for the rapid selection and concentration of a target molecule. Once the target molecules, in this case S. aureus bacteria, are isolated, further identification methods can be used. This is where a group of researchers working in Istanbul, Turkey became creative.

The grouphas engineered a S. aureus detection system using a mesoporous silica nanoparticle-oligonucleotide conjugate. The system’s limit of detection is 682 cells/mL, which indicates potential for use as a point-of-care diagnostic. The system detects Micrococcal nuclease (MNase), which is an enzyme specifically secreted by S.aureus. MNase degrades RNA or DNA, and is well known within the field to be a marker of S. aureus infection.

The system works as follows:

  1. A sample of blood (1 mL) is mixed with magnetic nanoparticles coated with silica and functionalized to bind to S. aureus.
  2. The nanoparticle-bacteria conjugate is isolated from solution by biomagnetic separation.
  3. The isolate is heated to release MNase out of the bacteria and into solution
  4. A non-magnetic mesoporous silica nanoparticle filled with fluorophore is added to the solution. The pores of this nanoparticle are sealed shut with oligonucleotides that are resistant to degradation by all nucleases except MNase. When the pores are capped the fluorophore is quenched and no fluorescence is visible.
  5. If MNase is present in solution the oligonucleotide caps are degraded, the nanoparticle pores open, and the flurofores are released. The free fluorphores are no longer quenched, and a fluorescence signal is measured.
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Recent advances in protein purification using biomagnetic separation

The use of magnetic nanoparticles and biomagnetic separation to isolate proteins from solution is advancingover more traditional column-based methods. Magnetic nanoparticles provide a gentler and more rapid separation process compared to column-based methods, and often demonstrategreater yield. With a properly scaled separation rack the separation process can be monitored in real-time and calibrated across experiments.

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