4.6 Review

Nanomaterial-Based Electrochemical Immunosensors for Clinically Significant Biomarkers

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 7, Issue 6, Pages 4669-4709

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma7064669

Keywords

biomarkers; biosensors; cancer diagnostic tools; carbon nanotubes; conducting polymers; electrochemical detection; metal nanoparticles; graphene; immunosensors; nanowires; psychiatry; quantum dots

Funding

  1. Benedictine University

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Nanotechnology has played a crucial role in the development of biosensors over the past decade. The development, testing, optimization, and validation of new biosensors has become a highly interdisciplinary effort involving experts in chemistry, biology, physics, engineering, and medicine. The sensitivity, the specificity and the reproducibility of biosensors have improved tremendously as a result of incorporating nanomaterials in their design. In general, nanomaterials-based electrochemical immunosensors amplify the sensitivity by facilitating greater loading of the larger sensing surface with biorecognition molecules as well as improving the electrochemical properties of the transducer. The most common types of nanomaterials and their properties will be described. In addition, the utilization of nanomaterials in immunosensors for biomarker detection will be discussed since these biosensors have enormous potential for a myriad of clinical uses. Electrochemical immunosensors provide a specific and simple analytical alternative as evidenced by their brief analysis times, inexpensive instrumentation, lower assay cost as well as good portability and amenability to miniaturization. The role nanomaterials play in biosensors, their ability to improve detection capabilities in low concentration analytes yielding clinically useful data and their impact on other biosensor performance properties will be discussed. Finally, the most common types of electroanalytical detection methods will be briefly touched upon.

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