Recent Advancements in Receptor Layer Engineering for Applications in SPR-Based Immunodiagnostics

Sensors (Basel). 2021 May 29;21(11):3781. doi: 10.3390/s21113781.

Abstract

The rapid progress in the development of surface plasmon resonance-based immunosensing platforms offers wide application possibilities in medical diagnostics as a label-free alternative to enzyme immunoassays. The early diagnosis of diseases or metabolic changes through the detection of biomarkers in body fluids requires methods characterized by a very good sensitivity and selectivity. In the case of the SPR technique, as well as other surface-sensitive detection strategies, the quality of the transducer-immunoreceptor interphase is crucial for maintaining the analytical reliability of an assay. In this work, an overview of general approaches to the design of functional SPR-immunoassays is presented. It covers both immunosensors, the design of which utilizes well-known and often commercially available substrates, as well as the latest solutions developed in-house. Various approaches employing chemical and passive binding, affinity-based antibody immobilization, and the introduction of nanomaterial-based surfaces are discussed. The essence of their influence on the improvement of the main analytical parameters of a given immunosensor is explained. Particular attention is paid to solutions compatible with the latest trends in the development of label-free immunosensors, such as platforms dedicated to real-time monitoring in a quasi-continuous mode, the use of in situ-generated receptor layers (elimination of the regeneration step), and biosensors using recombinant and labelled protein receptors.

Keywords: SPR; antibody immobilization; gold functionalization; immunosensor; medical diagnostics; non-specific interactions; self-assembled monolayers.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Biosensing Techniques*
  • Immunoassay
  • Nanostructures*
  • Reproducibility of Results
  • Surface Plasmon Resonance