Superwetting and aptamer functionalized shrink-induced high surface area electrochemical sensors

Biosens Bioelectron. 2017 Aug 15:94:438-442. doi: 10.1016/j.bios.2017.03.024. Epub 2017 Mar 12.

Abstract

Electrochemical sensing is moving to the forefront of point-of-care and wearable molecular sensing technologies due to the ability to miniaturize the required equipment, a critical advantage over optical methods in this field. Electrochemical sensors that employ roughness to increase their microscopic surface area offer a strategy to combatting the loss in signal associated with the loss of macroscopic surface area upon miniaturization. A simple, low-cost method of creating such roughness has emerged with the development of shrink-induced high surface area electrodes. Building on this approach, we demonstrate here a greater than 12-fold enhancement in electrochemically active surface area over conventional electrodes of equivalent on-chip footprint areas. This two-fold improvement on previous performance is obtained via the creation of a superwetting surface condition facilitated by a dissolvable polymer coating. As a test bed to illustrate the utility of this approach, we further show that electrochemical aptamer-based sensors exhibit exceptional signal strength (signal-to-noise) and excellent signal gain (relative change in signal upon target binding) when deployed on these shrink electrodes. Indeed, the observed 330% gain we observe for a kanamycin sensor is 2-fold greater than that seen on planar gold electrodes.

Keywords: Aptamer; Miniature; Point-of-care; Sensors; Shrink electrode; Superwetting.

MeSH terms

  • Aptamers, Nucleotide / chemistry*
  • Biosensing Techniques / methods*
  • Electrochemical Techniques / methods*
  • Electrodes
  • Gold / chemistry
  • Kanamycin / chemistry
  • Kanamycin / isolation & purification*
  • Surface Properties

Substances

  • Aptamers, Nucleotide
  • Kanamycin
  • Gold