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Dive into the research topics where Jorge Wong is active.

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Featured researches published by Jorge Wong.


Biosensors and Bioelectronics | 2009

Nano-bio-chips for high performance multiplexed protein detection: Determinations of cancer biomarkers in serum and saliva using quantum dot bioconjugate labels

Jesse V. Jokerst; Archana Raamanathan; Nicolaos Christodoulides; Pierre N. Floriano; Amanda A. Pollard; Glennon W. Simmons; Jorge Wong; Carole Gage; Wieslaw B. Furmaga; Spencer W. Redding; John T. McDevitt

The integration of semiconductor nanoparticle quantum dots (QDs) into a modular, microfluidic biosensor for the multiplexed quantitation of three important cancer markers, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA), cancer antigen 125 (CA125), and Her-2/Neu (C-erbB-2) was achieved. The functionality of the integrated sample processing, analyte capture and detection modalities was demonstrated using both serum and whole saliva specimens. Here, nano-bio-chips that employed a fluorescence transduction signal with QD-labeled detecting antibody were used in combination with antigen capture by a microporous agarose bead array supported within a microfluidics ensemble so as to complete the sandwich-type immunoassay. The utilization of QD probes in this miniaturized biosensor format resulted in signal amplification 30 times relative to that of standard molecular fluorophores as well as affording a reduction in observed limits of detection by nearly 2 orders of magnitude (0.02 ng/mL CEA; 0.11 pM CEA) relative to enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Assay validation studies indicate that measurements by the nano-bio-chip system correlate to standard methods at R(2)=0.94 and R(2)=0.95 for saliva and serum, respectively. This integrated nano-bio-chip assay system, in tandem with next-generation fluorophores, promises to be a sensitive, multiplexed tool for important diagnostic and prognostic applications.


Cancer Prevention Research | 2015

A Multiplexable, Microfluidic Platform for the Rapid Quantitation of a Biomarker Panel for Early Ovarian Cancer Detection at the Point-of-Care

Basil Shadfan; Archana Simmons; Glennon W. Simmons; Andy Ho; Jorge Wong; Karen H. Lu; Robert C. Bast; John T. McDevitt

Point-of-care (POC) diagnostic platforms have the potential to enable low-cost, large-scale screening. As no single biomarker is shed by all ovarian cancers, multiplexed biomarker panels promise improved sensitivity and specificity to address the unmet need for early detection of ovarian cancer. We have configured the programmable bio-nano-chip (p-BNC)—a multiplexable, microfluidic, modular platform—to quantify a novel multi-marker panel comprising CA125, HE4, MMP-7, and CA72-4. The p-BNC is a bead-based immunoanalyzer system with a credit-card–sized footprint that integrates automated sample metering, bubble and debris removal, reagent storage and waste disposal, permitting POC analysis. Multiplexed p-BNC immunoassays demonstrated high specificity, low cross-reactivity, low limits of detection suitable for early detection, and a short analysis time of 43 minutes. Day-to-day variability, a critical factor for longitudinally monitoring biomarkers, ranged between 5.4% and 10.5%, well below the biologic variation for all four markers. Biomarker concentrations for 31 late-stage sera correlated well (R2 = 0.71 to 0.93 for various biomarkers) with values obtained on the Luminex platform. In a 31 patient cohort encompassing early- and late-stage ovarian cancers along with benign and healthy controls, the multiplexed p-BNC panel was able to distinguish cases from controls with 68.7% sensitivity at 80% specificity. Utility for longitudinal biomarker monitoring was demonstrated with prediagnostic plasma from 2 cases and 4 controls. Taken together, the p-BNC shows strong promise as a diagnostic tool for large-scale screening that takes advantage of faster results and lower costs while leveraging possible improvement in sensitivity and specificity from biomarker panels. Cancer Prev Res; 8(1); 37–48. ©2014 AACR.


Sensors | 2012

Porous Bead-Based Diagnostic Platforms: Bridging the Gaps in Healthcare

Jie Chou; Jorge Wong; Nicolaos Christodoulides; Pierre N. Floriano; Ximena Sanchez; John T. McDevitt

Advances in lab-on-a-chip systems have strong potential for multiplexed detection of a wide range of analytes with reduced sample and reagent volume; lower costs and shorter analysis times. The completion of high-fidelity multiplexed and multiclass assays remains a challenge for the medical microdevice field; as it struggles to achieve and expand upon at the point-of-care the quality of results that are achieved now routinely in remote laboratory settings. This review article serves to explore for the first time the key intersection of multiplexed bead-based detection systems with integrated microfluidic structures alongside porous capture elements together with biomarker validation studies. These strategically important elements are evaluated here in the context of platform generation as suitable for near-patient testing. Essential issues related to the scalability of these modular sensor ensembles are explored as are attempts to move such multiplexed and multiclass platforms into large-scale clinical trials. Recent efforts in these bead sensors have shown advantages over planar microarrays in terms of their capacity to generate multiplexed test results with shorter analysis times. Through high surface-to-volume ratios and encoding capabilities; porous bead-based ensembles; when combined with microfluidic elements; allow for high-throughput testing for enzymatic assays; general chemistries; protein; antibody and oligonucleotide applications.


Analytical Chemistry | 2012

Modeling analyte transport and capture in porous bead sensors.

Jie Chou; Alexis Lennart; Jorge Wong; Mehnaaz F. Ali; Pierre N. Floriano; Nicolaos Christodoulides; James P. Camp; John T. McDevitt

Porous agarose microbeads, with high surface to volume ratios and high binding densities, are attracting attention as highly sensitive, affordable sensor elements for a variety of high performance bioassays. While such polymer microspheres have been extensively studied and reported on previously and are now moving into real-world clinical practice, very little work has been completed to date to model the convection, diffusion, and binding kinetics of soluble reagents captured within such fibrous networks. Here, we report the development of a three-dimensional computational model and provide the initial evidence for its agreement with experimental outcomes derived from the capture and detection of representative protein and genetic biomolecules in 290 μm porous beads. We compare this model to antibody-mediated capture of C-reactive protein and bovine serum albumin, along with hybridization of oligonucleotide sequences to DNA probes. These results suggest that, due to the porous interior of the agarose bead, internal analyte transport is both diffusion and convection based, and regardless of the nature of analyte, the bead interiors reveal an interesting trickle of convection-driven internal flow. On the basis of this model, the internal to external flow rate ratio is found to be in the range of 1:170 to 1:3100 for beads with agarose concentration ranging from 0.5% to 8% for the sensor ensembles here studied. Further, both model and experimental evidence suggest that binding kinetics strongly affect analyte distribution of captured reagents within the beads. These findings reveal that high association constants create a steep moving boundary in which unbound analytes are held back at the periphery of the bead sensor. Low association constants create a more shallow moving boundary in which unbound analytes diffuse further into the bead before binding. These models agree with experimental evidence and thus serve as a new tool set for the study of bioagent transport processes within a new class of medical microdevices.


Drug and Alcohol Dependence | 2015

Application of programmable bio-nano-chip system for the quantitative detection of drugs of abuse in oral fluids

Nicolaos Christodoulides; Richard De La Garza; Glennon W. Simmons; Michael P. McRae; Jorge Wong; Thomas F. Newton; Regina Smith; James J. Mahoney; Justin Hohenstein; Sobeyda Gomez; Pierre N. Floriano; Humberto Talavera; Daniel J. Sloan; David E. Moody; David M. Andrenyak; Thomas R. Kosten; Ahmed Haque; John T. McDevitt

OBJECTIVE There is currently a gap in on-site drug of abuse monitoring. Current detection methods involve invasive sampling of blood and urine specimens, or collection of oral fluid, followed by qualitative screening tests using immunochromatographic cartridges. While remote laboratories then may provide confirmation and quantitative assessment of a presumptive positive, this instrumentation is expensive and decoupled from the initial sampling making the current drug-screening program inefficient and costly. The authors applied a noninvasive oral fluid sampling approach integrated with the in-development chip-based Programmable bio-nano-chip (p-BNC) platform for the detection of drugs of abuse. METHOD The p-BNC assay methodology was applied for the detection of tetrahydrocannabinol, morphine, amphetamine, methamphetamine, cocaine, methadone and benzodiazepines, initially using spiked buffered samples and, ultimately, using oral fluid specimen collected from consented volunteers. RESULTS Rapid (∼10min), sensitive detection (∼ng/mL) and quantitation of 12 drugs of abuse was demonstrated on the p-BNC platform. Furthermore, the system provided visibility to time-course of select drug and metabolite profiles in oral fluids; for the drug cocaine, three regions of slope were observed that, when combined with concentration measurements from this and prior impairment studies, information about cocaine-induced impairment may be revealed. CONCLUSIONS This chip-based p-BNC detection modality has significant potential to be used in the future by law enforcement officers for roadside drug testing and to serve a variety of other settings, including outpatient and inpatient drug rehabilitation centers, emergency rooms, prisons, schools, and in the workplace.


Journal of Drug Abuse | 2015

Next Generation Programmable Bio-Nano-Chip System for On-Site Quantitative Drug Detection in Oral Fluids

Nicolaos Christodoulides; Richard De La Garza; Glennon W. Simmons; Michael P. McRae; Jorge Wong; Thomas F. Newton; Thomas R. Kosten; Ahmed Haque; John T. McDevitt

Current on-site drug of abuse detection methods involve invasive sampling of blood and urine specimens, or collection of oral fluid, followed by qualitative screening tests using immunochromatographic cartridges. Test confirmation and quantitative assessment of a presumptive positive are then provided by remote laboratories, an inefficient and costly process decoupled from the initial sampling. Recently, a new noninvasive oral fluid sampling approach that is integrated with the chip-based Programmable Bio-Nano-Chip (p-BNC) platform has been developed for the rapid (~ 10 minutes), sensitive detection (~ ng/ml) and quantitation of 12 drugs of abuse. Furthermore, the system can provide the time-course of select drug and metabolite profiles in oral fluids. For cocaine, we observed three slope components were correlated with cocaine-induced impairment using this chipbased p-BNC detection modality. Thus, this p-BNC has significant potential for roadside drug testing by law enforcement officers. Initial work reported on chipbased drug detection was completed using ‘macro’ or “chip in the lab” prototypes, that included metal encased “flow cells”, external peristaltic pumps and a bench-top analyzer system instrumentation. We now describe the next generation miniaturized analyzer instrumentation along with customized disposables and sampling devices. These tools will offer real-time oral fluid drug monitoring capabilities, to be used for roadside drug testing as well as testing in clinical settings as a non-invasive, quantitative, accurate and sensitive tool to verify patient adherence to treatment.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

Programmable bio-nano-chip system for saliva diagnostics

Nicolaos Christodoulides; Richard De La Garza; Glennon W. Simmons; Michael P. McRae; Jorge Wong; Thomas R. Kosten; Craig S. Miller; Jeffrey L. Ebersole; John T. McDevitt

This manuscript describes programmable Bio-Nano-Chip (p-BNC) approach that serves as miniaturized assay platform designed for the rapid detection and quantitation of multiple analytes in biological fluids along with the specific applications in salivary diagnostics intended for the point of need (PON). Included here are oral fluid-based tests for local periodontal disease, systemic cardiac disease and multiplexed tests for drugs of abuse.


Small | 2011

Location of biomarkers and reagents within agarose beads of a programmable bio-nano-chip.

Jesse V. Jokerst; Jie Chou; James P. Camp; Jorge Wong; Alexis Lennart; Amanda A. Pollard; Pierre N. Floriano; Nicolaos Christodoulides; Glennon W. Simmons; Yanjie Zhou; Mehnaaz F. Ali; John T. McDevitt


Lab on a Chip | 2015

Programmable bio-nano-chip system: a flexible point-of-care platform for bioscience and clinical measurements.

Michael P. McRae; Glennon W. Simmons; Jorge Wong; Basil Shadfan; Sanjiv Gopalkrishnan; Nicolaos Christodoulides; John T. McDevitt


Methods of Molecular Biology | 2007

A microchip-based assay for interleukin-6.

Nicolaos Christodoulides; Priya Dharshan; Jorge Wong; Pierre N. Floriano; Dean P. Neikirk; John T. McDevitt

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Alexis Lennart

University of Texas at Austin

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Amanda A. Pollard

University of Texas at Austin

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James P. Camp

University of Texas at Austin

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