Diazonium cation electrodeposition was investigated for the direct and electro-addressed
immobilization of proteins. For the first time, this reaction was triggered directly onto diazonium-modified
proteins. Screen-printed (SP) graphite electrode microarrays were studied as active support for this
immobilization. A 10-microelectrode (eight working electrodes, 0.2 mm2 each; one reference; and one
auxiliary) setup was used to study the addressing possibilities of the method. These electrode microarrays
were shown to be able to covalently graft diazonium cations through electrochemical reduction. Cyclic
voltammetry and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy were used to characterize the electrochemical grafting
onto our SP graphite surface and suggested that a diazonium monolayer was deposited. Rabbit and human
immunoglobulins (IgGs) were then chemically coupled to an aniline derivative (4-carboxymethylaniline),
followed by diazotation to form an aryl diazonium function available for the electrodeposition. These modified
proteins were both successfully electro-addressed at the surface of the graphite electrodes without cross-talk or interference. The immuno-biochip obtained using this novel approach enabled the specific detection
of anti-rabbit IgG antibodies with a detection limit of 50 fmol of protein. A promising strategy to immobilize
markedly different biological entities was then presented, providing an excellent spatial specificity of the
electro-addressing