| Literature DB >> 29547521 |
Francesca Malvano1, Luigi Maritato2, Giovanni Carapella3, Pasquale Orgiani4, Roberto Pilloton5, Marisa Di Matteo6, Donatella Albanese7.
Abstract
Due to their interesting ferroelectric, conductive and dielectric properties, in recent years, perovskite-structured materials have begun to attract increasing interest in the biosensing field. In this study, a strontium titanate perovskite layer (SrTiO₃) has been synthesized on a platinum electrode and exploited for the development of an impedimetric label-free immunosensor for Escherichia coli O157:H7 detection. The electrochemical characterization of the perovskite-modified electrode during the construction of the immunosensor, as well as after the interaction with different E. coli O157:H7 concentrations, showed a reproducible decrease of the total capacitance of the system that was used for the analytical characterization of the immunosensor. Under optimized conditions, the capacitive immunosensor showed a linear relationship from to 1 to 7 log cfu/mL with a low detection limit of 1 log cfu/mL. Moreover, the atomic force microscopy (AFM) technique underlined the increase in roughness of the SrTiO₃-modified electrode surface after antibody immobilization, as well as the effective presence of cells with the typical size of E. coli.Entities:
Keywords: biosensors; label-free; perovskite; strontium titanium oxide
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29547521 PMCID: PMC5872074 DOI: 10.3390/bios8010026
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Steps used for the fabrication of Escherichia coli O157:H7 label-free immunosensor. At the end (right side) the measurement step is reported, too.
Figure 2Nyquist plots in non-faradaic impedance measurements of bare and SrTiO3-modified Pt electrodes.
Figure 3Nyquist plots in non-faradaic impedance measurements during the fabrication of the immunosensor.
Figure 4Roughness of the SrTiO3-modified electrode surface before (a) and after (b) antibody immobilization.
Figure 5AFM image of an E. coli cell. (a) AFM image (b) observational results.
Figure 6Bode plots in non-faradaic impedance measurements of the immunosensor before and after the interaction with different E. coli concentrations in the frequency range 0.1–1 Hz. The inset shows the equivalent circuit used for impedimetric data fitting.
Figure 7Calibration curve of Escherichia coli O157:H7 immunosensor. Data represent the average values of five immunosensors.
Figure 8Calibration curves of a capacitive E. coli immunosensor (a) and a resistive E. coli immunosensor (b).
Analytical parameters of capacitive and resistive E. coli immunosensors developed in this work.
| Working Principle | Sensitivity (% Change) | Linear Range (log cfu/mL) | LOD (log cfu/mL) | RSD (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Capacitive | 11.65 | 1–7 | 1 | 3.1 |
| Resistive | 8.53 | 1.47–7 | 1.47 | 3.9 |
Comparison among impedimetric label-free Escherichia coli O157:H7 immunosensors.
| Schematic Immunosensor Assembly | Working Principle | Linear Range | LOD | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Au + PANI + Glu + anti- | Resistive | 2–7 | 100 | [ |
| Au + MHDA | Resistive | 1.47–8.48 | 2 | [ |
| GOPE + AuNPs + Streptavidn + Biotin + anti- | Resistive | 2.17–8.17 | 150 | [ |
| Epoxysilane-mod. ITO + PDMS + anti- | Resistive | 1–6 | 10 | [ |
| Pt + SrTiO3 + APTES-Glu + anti- | Capacitive | 1–7 | 10 | This work |
| Au + Cys + Glu + anti- | Resistive | 1.47–1 | 30 | This work |
PANI: polyaniline; Glu: glutaraldheyde; MHDA: 16-mercaptohexadecanoic acid; GOPE: graphene oxide paper electrode; PDMS: poly(dimethylsiloxane).