A quantitatively controlled immunoassay at the nanoliter level based on inkjet technology was developed. The volumes of solutions/samples introduced were accurately controlled at the nanoliter level by using a four-channel inkjet microchip. Antibody/antigen recognition was performed in an amino modified capillary with a short diffusion distance. As a proof-of-concept, a sandwich immunoassay of human IgA was conducted using the developed method. The results demonstrated a low detection limit (0.03 ng mL-1) and a wide linear range (0.1-100 ng mL-1, R2 = 0.9959), comparable to currently used methods. For each capillary immunoassay, the volumes of the ejected solutions for human IgA, FITC conjugated anti-human IgA and the glycine-HCl dissociation solution were 52.15 ± 1.53 nL, 65.70 ± 2.06 nL and 37.51 ± 0.96 nL, respectively. This method, in which an inkjet functions as a novel "nanoliter pipette" in combination with a capillary for nanoliter immunoassays, has promising applications in areas of clinical diagnosis and drug screening. © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2014.
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Yang, J., Zeng, H., Xue, S., Chen, F., Nakajima, H., & Uchiyama, K. (2014). Quantitative-nanoliter immunoassay in capillary immune microreactor adopted inkjet technology. Analytical Methods, 6(9), 2832–2836. https://doi.org/10.1039/c4ay00216d