4 research outputs found
Probing the Interactions of Intrinsically Disordered Proteins Using Nanoparticle Tags
The structural plasticity of intrinsically
disordered proteins serves as a rich area for scientific inquiry.
Such proteins lack a fix three-dimensional structure but can interact
with multiple partners through numerous weak bonds. Nevertheless,
this intrinsic plasticity possesses a challenging hurdle in their
characterization. We underpin the intermolecular interactions between
intrinsically disordered neurofilaments in various hydrated conditions,
using grafted gold nanoparticle (NP) tags. Beyond its biological significance,
this approach can be applied to modify the surface interaction of
NPs for the creation of future tunable “smart” hybrid
biomaterials
Biorecognition Layer Engineering: Overcoming Screening Limitations of Nanowire-Based FET Devices
Detection of biological species is of great importance
to numerous
areas of medical and life sciences from the diagnosis of diseases
to the discovery of new drugs. Essential to the detection mechanism
is the transduction of a signal associated with the specific recognition
of biomolecules of interest. Nanowire-based electrical devices have
been demonstrated as a powerful sensing platform for the highly sensitive
detection of a wide-range of biological and chemical species. Yet,
detecting biomolecules in complex biosamples of high ionic strength
(>100 mM) is severely hampered by ionic screening effects. As a
consequence,
most of existing nanowire sensors operate under low ionic strength
conditions, requiring ex situ biosample manipulation steps, that is,
desalting processes. Here, we demonstrate an effective approach for
the direct detection of biomolecules in untreated serum, based on
the fragmentation of antibody-capturing units. Size-reduced antibody
fragments permit the biorecognition event to occur in closer proximity
to the nanowire surface, falling within the charge-sensitive Debye
screening length. Furthermore, we explored the effect of antibody
surface coverage on the resulting detection sensitivity limit under
the high ionic strength conditions tested and found that lower antibody
surface densities, in contrary to high antibody surface coverage,
leads to devices of greater sensitivities. Thus, the direct and sensitive
detection of proteins in untreated serum and blood samples was effectively
performed down to the sub-pM concentration range without the requirement
of biosamples manipulation
Si Nanowires Forest-Based On-Chip Biomolecular Filtering, Separation and Preconcentration Devices: Nanowires Do it All
The development of efficient biomolecular separation
and purification
techniques is of critical importance in modern genomics, proteomics,
and biosensing areas, primarily due to the fact that most biosamples
are mixtures of high diversity and complexity. Most of existent techniques
lack the capability to rapidly and selectively separate and concentrate
specific target proteins from a complex biosample, and are difficult
to integrate with lab-on-a-chip sensing devices. Here, we demonstrate
the development of an on-chip all-SiNW filtering, selective separation,
desalting, and preconcentration platform for the direct analysis of
whole blood and other complex biosamples. The separation of required
protein analytes from raw biosamples is first performed using a antibody-modified
roughness-controlled SiNWs (silicon nanowires) forest of ultralarge
binding surface area, followed by the release of target proteins in
a controlled liquid media, and their subsequent detection by supersensitive
SiNW-based FETs arrays fabricated on the same chip platform. Importantly,
this is the first demonstration of an <i>all-NWs device</i> for the whole direct analysis of blood samples on a single chip,
able to selectively collect and separate specific low abundant proteins,
while easily removing unwanted blood components (proteins, cells)
and achieving desalting effects, without the requirement of time-consuming
centrifugation steps, the use of desalting or affinity columns. Futhermore,
we have demonstrated the use of our nanowire forest-based separation
device, integrated in a single platform with downstream SiNW-based
sensors arrays, for the real-time ultrasensitive detection of protein
biomarkers directly from blood samples. The whole ultrasensitive protein
label-free analysis process can be practically performed in less than
10 min
Non-covalent Monolayer-Piercing Anchoring of Lipophilic Nucleic Acids: Preparation, Characterization, and Sensing Applications
Functional interfaces of biomolecules and inorganic substrates like semiconductor materials are of utmost importance for the development of highly sensitive biosensors and microarray technology. However, there is still a lot of room for improving the techniques for immobilization of biomolecules, in particular nucleic acids and proteins. Conventional anchoring strategies rely on attaching biomacromolecules via complementary functional groups, appropriate bifunctional linker molecules, or non-covalent immobilization via electrostatic interactions. In this work, we demonstrate a facile, new, and general method for the reversible non-covalent attachment of amphiphilic DNA probes containing hydrophobic units attached to the nucleobases (lipid–DNA) onto SAM-modified gold electrodes, silicon semiconductor surfaces, and glass substrates. We show the anchoring of well-defined amounts of lipid–DNA onto the surface by insertion of their lipid tails into the hydrophobic monolayer structure. The surface coverage of DNA molecules can be conveniently controlled by modulating the initial concentration and incubation time. Further control over the DNA layer is afforded by the additional external stimulus of temperature. Heating the DNA-modified surfaces at temperatures >80 °C leads to the release of the lipid–DNA structures from the surface without harming the integrity of the hydrophobic SAMs. These supramolecular DNA layers can be further tuned by anchoring onto a mixed SAM containing hydrophobic molecules of different lengths, rather than a homogeneous SAM. Immobilization of lipid–DNA on such SAMs has revealed that the surface density of DNA probes is highly dependent on the composition of the surface layer and the structure of the lipid–DNA. The formation of the lipid–DNA sensing layers was monitored and characterized by numerous techniques including X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, quartz crystal microbalance, ellipsometry, contact angle measurements, atomic force microscopy, and confocal fluorescence imaging. Finally, this new DNA modification strategy was applied for the sensing of target DNAs using silicon-nanowire field-effect transistor device arrays, showing a high degree of specificity toward the complementary DNA target, as well as single-base mismatch selectivity