| Literature DB >> 28723173 |
Christoph Fenzl1, Pranati Nayak2, Thomas Hirsch1, Otto S Wolfbeis1, Husam N Alshareef2, Antje J Baeumner1.
Abstract
Graphene as a transducer material has produced some of the best-performing sensing approaches to date opening the door toward integrated miniaturized all-carbon point-of-care devices. Addressing this opportunity, laser-scribed graphene (LSG) electrodes are demonstrated here as highly sensitive and reliable biosensor transducers in blood serum analysis. These flexible electrodes with large electrochemical surface areas were fabricated using a direct-write laser process on polyimide foils. A universal immobilization approach is established by anchoring 1-pyrenebutyric acid to the graphene and subsequently covalently attaching an aptamer against the coagulation factor thrombin as an exemplary bioreceptor to the carboxyl groups. The resulting biosensor displays extremely low detection limits of 1 pM in buffer and 5 pM in the complex matrix of serum.Entities:
Keywords: aptamer; biosensor; carbon nanomaterial; electrochemistry; immobilization; laser-scribed graphene
Year: 2017 PMID: 28723173 DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.7b00066
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Sens ISSN: 2379-3694 Impact factor: 7.711