4.8 Article

Biofunctionalization on Alkylated Silicon Substrate Surfaces via Click Chemistry

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 132, Issue 46, Pages 16432-16441

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja1025497

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Welch Foundation [E-1498]
  2. NSF [CTS-0349228]
  3. Alliance for Nanohealth [W81XWH-09-2-0139]
  4. Texas Center for Superconductivity at the University of Houston
  5. [DMR-0706627]
  6. [NIH R21 HD058985]
  7. [NIH R21EY018303]
  8. [VA CDA-2 RRD B4623]
  9. [NIH R21 DK077313]

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Biofunctionalization of silicon substrates is important to the development of silicon-based biosensors and devices. Compared to conventional organosiloxane films on silicon oxide intermediate layers, organic monolayers directly bound to the nonoxidized silicon substrates via Si-C bonds enhance the sensitivity of detection and the stability against hydrolytic cleavage. Such monolayers presenting a high density of terminal alkynyl groups for bioconjugation via copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne 1,3-dipolar cycloaddition (CuAAC, a click reaction) were reported. However, yields of the CuAAC reactions on these monolayer platforms were low. Also, the nonspecific adsorption of proteins on the resultant surfaces remained a major obstacle for many potential biological applications. Herein, we report a new type of clickable monolayers grown by selective, photoactivated surface hydrosilylation of alpha,omega-alkenynes, where the alkynyl terminal is protected with a trimethylgermanyl (TMG) group, on hydrogen-terminated silicon substrates. The TMG groups on the film are readily removed in aqueous solutions in the presence of Cu(I). Significantly, the degermanylation and the subsequent CuAAC reaction with various azides could be combined into a single step in good yields. Thus, oligo(ethylene glycol) (OEG) with an azido tag was attached to the TMG-alkyne surfaces, leading to OEG-terminated surfaces that reduced the nonspecific adsorption of protein (fibrinogen) by >98%. The CuAAC reaction could be performed in microarray format to generate arrays of mannose and biotin with varied densities on the protein-resistant OEG background. We also demonstrated that the monolayer platform could be functionalized with mannose for highly specific capturing of living targets (EScherichia coli expressing fimbriae) onto the silicon substrates.

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