Introducing Nanoscale Electrochemistry in Small-Molecule Detection for Tackling Existing Limitations of Affinity-Based Label-Free Biosensing Applications
Cited 0 time in
Cited 0 time in
-
Title
- Introducing Nanoscale Electrochemistry in Small-Molecule Detection for Tackling Existing Limitations of Affinity-Based Label-Free Biosensing Applications
-
Author(s)
- Don Hui Lee; Won-Yong Lee; Jayoung Kim
-
Publication Date
- 2023-08
-
Journal
- JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY, v.145, no.32, pp.17767 - 17778
-
Publisher
- AMER CHEMICAL SOC
-
Abstract
- Electrochemical sensing techniques for small moleculeshave progressedin many applications, including disease diagnosis and prevention aswell as monitoring of health conditions. However, affinity-based detectionfor low-abundance small molecules is still challenging due to theimbalance in target-to-receptor size ratio as well as the lack ofa highly sensitive signal transducing method. Herein, we introducednanoscale electrochemistry in affinity-based small molecule detectionby measuring the change of quantum electrochemical properties witha nanoscale artificial receptor upon binding. We prepared a nanoscalemolecularly imprinted composite polymer (MICP) for cortisol by electrochemicallycopolymerizing & beta;-cyclodextrin and redox-active methylene blueto offer a high target-to-receptor size ratio, thus realizing "bind-and-read"detection of cortisol as a representative target small molecule, alongwith extremely high sensitivity. Using the quantum conductance measurement,the present MICP-based sensor can detect cortisol from 1.00 x10(-12) to 1.00 x 10(-6) M witha detection limit of 3.93 x 10(-13) M (S/N =3), which is much lower than those obtained with other electrochemicalmethods. Moreover, the present MICP-based cortisol sensor exhibitedreversible cortisol sensing capability through a simple electrochemicalregeneration process without cumbersome steps of washing and solutionchange, which enables "continuous detection". In situdetection of cortisol in human saliva following circadian rhythm wascarried out with the present MICP-based cortisol sensor, and the resultswere validated with the LC-MS/MS method. Consequently, thispresent cortisol sensor based on nanoscale MICP and quantum electrochemistryovercomes the limitations of affinity-based biosensors, opening upnew possibilities for sensor applications in point-of-care and wearablehealthcare devices.
-
URI
- https://pr.ibs.re.kr/handle/8788114/13792
-
DOI
- 10.1021/jacs.3c04458
-
ISSN
- 0002-7863
-
Appears in Collections:
- Center for Nanomedicine (나노의학 연구단) > 1. Journal Papers (저널논문)
- Files in This Item:
-
There are no files associated with this item.
-
- Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
Items in DSpace are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.