4.8 Article

Electrochemical Biosensor with Enhanced Antifouling Capability for COVID-19 Nucleic Acid Detection in Complex Biological Media

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 14, Pages 5963-5971

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c00724

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21974075, 21675093]
  2. Taishan Scholar Program of Shandong Province of China [ts20110829]
  3. Double Hundred Program for Foreign Experts of Shandong Province [WST2019011]

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An antifouling electrochemical biosensor was developed using electropolymerized polyaniline nanowires and newly designed peptides for COVID-19 N-gene detection, demonstrating a low detection limit and wide linear range. The sensor showed high sensitivity and accurate detection capability in complex systems.
Biofouling caused by the accumulation of biomolecules on sensing surfaces is one of the major problems and challenges to realize the practical application of electrochemical biosensors, and an effective way to counter this problem is the construction of antifouling biosensors. Herein, an antifouling electrochemical biosensor was constructed based on electropolymerized polyaniline (PANI) nanowires and newly designed peptides for the detection of the COVID-19 N-gene. The inverted Y-shaped peptides were designed with excellent antifouling properties and two anchoring branches, and their antifouling performances against proteins and complex biological media were investigated using different approaches. Based on the biotin-streptavidin affinity system, biotin-labeled probes specific to the N-gene (nucleocapsid phosphoprotein) of COVID-19 were immobilized onto the peptide-coated PANI nanowires, forming a highly sensitive and antifouling electrochemical sensing interface for the detection of COVID-19 nucleic acid. The antifouling genosensor demonstrated a wide linear range (10(-14) to 10(-9) M) and an exceptional low detection limit (3.5 fM). The remarkable performance of the genosensor derives from the high peak current of PANI, which is chosen as the sensing signal, and the extraordinary antifouling properties of designed peptides, which guarantee accurate detection in complex systems. These crucial features represent essential elements for future rapid and decentralized clinical testing.

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