Abstract
Buoyant silica microbubbles have recently been developed and commercialized for capturing and separating cells and pro-teins. The buoyancy motion both separates the analyte and accelerates analyte capture. Additionally, they can be coupled with magnetic microspheres for ultrasensitive buoyant-analyte-magnetic (BAM) sandwich immunoassays. This report uses Monte Carlo simulations of buoyant microsphere motion and Brownian diffusion to investigate how buoyancy affects the capture rate of analytes and subsequent BAM-complex formation. To computationally simulate buoyant capture kinetics, nucleocapsid proteins (the analyte) are first seeded with a 3D matrix of buoyant particles underneath. At every computational step, each nucleocapsid protein and buoyant microbubble moves by simulated diffusion, and the microbubbles also rise by buoyant force. When a protein comes within a microbubble’s radius, it can be “captured” (with a given probability) and thereafter moves with the microbubble. These simulations show that buoyant motion enhances protein capture rate, and for constant total microbubble volume, a larger radius accelerates capture. These findings will help for optimizing experimental protocols and interpreting results for buoyant capture and BAM complex formation.
Supplementary materials
Title
Animation of protein capture assisted by buoyant separation (CABS)
Description
Animation of simulated protein diffusion and capture in a field of buoyant microbubbles.
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