1 research outputs found
An Ultrasensitive Nanowire-Transistor Biosensor for Detecting Dopamine Release from Living PC12 Cells under Hypoxic Stimulation
Dopamine (DA) is
an important neurotransmitter that is involved
in neuronal signal transduction and several critical illnesses. However,
the concentration of DA is extremely low in patients and is difficult
to detect using existing electrochemical biosensors with detection
limits typically around nanomolar levels (∼10<sup>–9</sup> M). Here, we developed a nanoelectronic device as a biosensor for
ultrasensitive and selective DA detection by modifying DNA-aptamers
on a multiple-parallel-connected (MPC) silicon nanowire field-effect
transistor (referred to as MPC aptamer/SiNW-FET). Compared with conventional
electrochemical methods, the MPC aptamer/SiNW-FET has been demonstrated
to improve the limit of DA detection to <10<sup>–11</sup> M and to possess a detection specificity that is able to distinguish
DA from other chemical analogues, such as ascorbic acid, catechol,
phenethylamine, tyrosine, epinephrine, and norepinephrine. This MPC
aptamer/SiNW-FET was also applied to monitor DA release under hypoxic
stimulation from living PC12 cells. The real-time recording of the
exocytotic DA induced by hypoxia reveals that the increase in intracellular
Ca<sup>2+</sup> that is required to trigger DA secretion is dominated
by an extracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> influx, rather than the release
of intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> stores