A graphene nanoplatelet-polydopamine molecularly imprinted biosensor for Ultratrace creatinine detection

Abstract

Accurate and reliable analysis of creatinine is clinically important for the early detection and monitoring of patients with kidney disease. We report a novel graphene nanoplatelet (GNP)/polydopamine (PDA)-molecularly imprinted polymer (MIP) biosensor for the ultra-trace detection of creatinine in a range of body fluids. Dopamine hydrochloride (DA) monomers were polymerized using a simple one-pot method to form a thin PDA-MIP layer on the surface of GNP with high density of creatinine recognition sites. This novel surface-MIP strategy resulted in a record low limit-of-detection (LOD) of 2 × 10^{−2} pg/ml with a wide dynamic detection range between 1 × 10^{−1}-1 × 10^{9} pg/ml. The practical application of this GNP/PDA-MIP biosensor has been tested by measuring creatinine in human serum, urine, and peritoneal dialysis (PD) fluids. The average recovery rate was 93.7–109.2% with relative standard deviation (RSD) below 4.1% compared to measurements made using standard clinical laboratory methods. Our GNP/PDA-MIP biosensor holds high promise for further development as a rapid, accurate, point-of-care diagnostic platform for detecting and monitoring patients with kidney disease

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