Multiscale sensing of antibody - antigen interactions by organic transistors and single-molecule force spectroscopy


Autoria(s): Casalini, Stefano; Dumitru, Andra Cristina; Leonardi, Francesca; Bortolotti, Carlo Augusto; Herruzo, Elena Tomas; Campana, Alessandra; Oliveira, Rafael Furlan de; Cramer, Tobias; Garcia, Ricardo; Biscarini, Fabio
Contribuinte(s)

Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP)

Data(s)

21/10/2015

21/10/2015

01/05/2015

Resumo

Fundação de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado de São Paulo (FAPESP)

Processo FAPESP: 2013/03857-0

Antibody-antigen (Ab-Ag) recognition is the primary event at the basis of many biosensing platforms. In label-free biosensors, these events occurring at solid liquid interfaces are complex and often difficult to control technologically across the smallest length scales down to the molecular scale. Here a molecular-scale technique, such as single-molecule force spectroscopy, is performed across areas of a real electrode functionalized for the immunodetection of an inflammatory cytokine, viz. interleukin-4 (114). The statistical analysis of force distance curves allows us to quantify the probability, the characteristic length scales, the adhesion energy, and the time scales of specific recognition. These results enable us to rationalize the response of an electrolyte-gated organic field-effect transistor (EGOFET) operated as an 114 immuno-sensor. Two different strategies for the immobilization of 114 antibodies on the Au gate electrode have been compared: antibodies are bound to (i) a smooth film of His-tagged protein G (PG)/Au; (ii) a 6-aminohexanethiol (HSC6NH2) self-assembled monolayer on Au through glutaraldehyde. The most sensitive EGOFET (concentration minimum detection level down to 5 nM of 114) is obtained with the first functionalization strategy. This result is correlated to the highest probability (30%) of specific binding events detected by force spectroscopy on Ab/PG/Au electrodes, compared to 10% probability on electrodes with the second functionalization. Specifically, this demonstrates that Ab/PG/Au yields the largest areal density of oriented antibodies available for recognition. More in general, this work shows that specific recognition events in multiscale biosensors can be assessed, quantified, and optimized by means of a nanoscale technique.

Formato

5051-5062

Identificador

http://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/acsnano.5b00136

Acs Nano. Washington: Amer Chemical Soc, v. 9, n. 5, p. 5051-5062, 2015.

1936-0851

http://hdl.handle.net/11449/129444

http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsnano.5b00136

WOS:000355383000041

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Chemical Soc

Relação

Acs Nano

Direitos

closedAccess

Palavras-Chave #Organic field-effect transistors #Immunosensing #Interleukin-4 #Single-molecule force spectroscopy #Atomic force microscopy #Biorecognition #Bioelectronics
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article