posted on 2025-03-31, 15:43authored byAlyssa
P. Cartwright, Benjamin C. Wollant, Elizabeth S. York, Liwei Zheng, Steven Yee, Huong C. Chau, Glaivy Batsuli, H. Tom Soh
The ability to measure factor Xa
activity directly in whole blood
samples offers a path toward point-of-care monitoring and personalized
anticoagulant dosage, potentially reducing bleeding risk and other
anticoagulant-associated complications. We present a strategy to enable
direct optical detection of factor Xa in minimally processed whole
blood samples. Our strategy relies on a custom FRET-pair labeled DNA-peptide
substrate, allowing FRET ratio to be monitored as an indicator of
factor Xa activity. Substrates are tethered to a tapered-fiber sensor
to allow evanescent detection of fluorescence directly at the sensor
surface, minimizing background media interference and enabling detection
directly in blood samples. After characterizing the custom substrate
and demonstrating the correlation of fiber-based measurements to an
existing chromogenic assay, we demonstrate the detection of endogenous
factor Xa activity in >85% whole blood. Finally, we demonstrate
the
detection of therapeutic concentrations of enoxaparin, a widely used
anticoagulant, directly in 90% whole blood in less than an hour and
correlate these measurements to activated partial thromboplastin time
(aPTT) testing. Together, these results indicate a promising strategy
to achieve point-of-care factor Xa detection, enabling personalized
anticoagulant treatment and reducing adverse outcomes.