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Cho, Yoon-Kyoung
FRUITS Lab.
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Biomembrane-Modified Field Effect Transistors for Sensitive and Quantitative Detection of Biological Toxins and Pathogens

Author(s)
Gong, HuaChen, FangHuang, ZhenlongGu, YueZhang, QiangzheChen, YijieZhang, YueZhuang, JiaCho, Yoon-KyoungFang, Ronnie H.Gao, WeiweiXu, ShengZhang, Liangfang
Issued Date
2019-03
DOI
10.1021/acsnano.9b00911
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/30630
Fulltext
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acsnano.9b00911
Citation
ACS NANO, v.13, no.3, pp.3714 - 3722
Abstract
The efforts of detecting bioactive targets with complex, dynamic, and unknown molecular profiles have inspired the development of various biosensor platforms. Herein, we report a cell-membrane-modified field effect transistor (FET) as a function-based nanosensor for the detection and quantitative measurement of numerous toxins and biological samples. By coating carbon nanotube FETs with natural red blood cell membranes, the resulting biomimetic nanosensor can selectively interact with and absorb broad-spectrum hemolytic toxins regardless of their molecular structures. Toxin-biomembrane interactions alter the local charge distribution at the FET surface in an ultrasensitive and concentration-dependent manner, resulting in a detection limit down to the femtomolar (fM) range. Accurate and quantitative measurements are enabled via a built-in calibration mechanism of the sensor, which overcomes batch-to-batch fabrication variations, and are demonstrated using three distinct toxins and various complex bacterial supernatants. The measured signals of bacterium-secreted proteins correlate linearly with the actual bacterial numbers, making the biosensor a nontraditional approach to rapidly detecting bacterial concentrations without a need to count bacterial colonies.
Publisher
American Chemical Society
ISSN
1936-0851
Keyword (Author)
biosensorcarbon nanotubecell membranefield effect transistorhemolysis
Keyword
BacteriaBiomimeticsBiosensorsBloodCarbon nanotubesCell membranesCorrelation detectorsCytologyField effect transistorsMetabolitesNanosensorsToxic materialsYarnBio-sensor platformsBuilt-in calibrationConcentration-dependent mannershemolysisLocal charge distributionsNon-traditional approachQuantitative detectionQuantitative measurementCarbon nanotube field effect transistors

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