Specific Activity of Polypyrrole Nanoparticulate Immunoreagents: Comparison of Surface Chemistry and Immobilization Options

Abstract
Polypyrrole-based colloids with differing surface chemistries were compared with respect to the specific activity of immobilized antibody. Monoclonal antibody to the alpha subunit of human chorionic gonadotropin (hCG) was modified by incorporation of cystamine into the Fc-carbohydrate, followed by reduction with dithiothreitol resulting in the generation of 4.5 free thiols per IgG. The reduced IgG was added to clean, unmodified and surface-modified polypyrrole colloids. Functionalized colloids included carboxylate-modified polypyrrole, poly[pyrrole-co-1-(2-carboxyethyl) pyrrole]−silica composite, and amine forms of the carboxylated colloids. The amine-functionalized colloids were subsequently treated with sulfosuccinimidyl 4-(N-maleimidomethyl)cyclohexane-1-carboxylate to provide thiol-reactive maleimide surface groups. Following the conjugation of IgG to the colloids, bound and soluble antibody activity was quantitated using a sequentially competitive immunoassay for hCG, based on an automated commercial hCG kit. The results indicated that all forms of polypyrrole retained the equivalence of between 12 and 33 μg of IgG activity/mg of colloidal solids, relative to the unmodified soluble IgG.