4.6 Article

Nanoporous membrane based impedance sensors to detect the enzymatic activity of botulinum neurotoxin A

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 1, Issue 47, Pages 6544-6550

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c3tb21152e

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Hong Kong Research Council General Research Grant [PolyU 5358/09E, B-Q25N]
  2. Hong Kong PhD Fellowship Scheme Fund [HKPF10-13386/PolyU RUY5]

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Botulinum neurotoxins are among the most potent toxic bacterial proteins for humans and there is a great need to develop simple, rapid and sensitive methods for toxin detection and protease activity quantification in field deployment. In this paper, a nanoporous membrane based impedance sensor was developed to monitor the activity of the BoNT serotype A light chain protease (LcA). Synaptosomal-associated protein 25 (SNAP-25) was first immobilized inside nanopore walls via silane linkers. BoNT LcA was then injected over the nanoporous membrane substrate sensor and specifically cleaved SNAP-25. The cleavage activity could be monitored by measuring impedance signals across nanoporous membranes which represented the nanopore blockage degree. This initial device could achieve a 500 pM LcA detection limit within 25 minutes.

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