4.6 Article

Pocketable Biosensor Based on Quartz-Crystal Microbalance and Its Application to DNA Detection

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23010281

Keywords

quartz-crystal microbalance; biosensor; IC card size; DNA hybridization; single-base mismatch detection

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Quartz-crystal microbalance (QCM) is a technique for measuring nanogram-order masses. A card-sized QCM device was developed by miniaturizing electronic components and film batteries from smartphones and wearable devices. The device demonstrated sensitive and specific detection of DNA chains, making it a potential portable biosensor for various fields.
Quartz-crystal microbalance (QCM) is a technique that can measure nanogram-order masses. When a receptor is immobilized on the sensor surface of a QCM device, the device can detect chemical molecules captured by the mass change. Although QCM devices have been applied to biosensors that detect biomolecules without labels for biomolecular interaction analysis, most highly sensitive QCM devices are benchtop devices. We considered the fabrication of an IC card-sized QCM device that is both portable and battery-powered. Its miniaturization was achieved by repurposing electronic components and film batteries from smartphones and wearable devices. To demonstrate the applicability of the card-sized QCM device as a biosensor, DNA-detection experiments were performed. The card-sized QCM device could detect specific 10-mer DNA chains while discerning single-base differences with a sensitivity similar to that of a conventional benchtop device. The card-sized QCM device can be used in laboratories and in various other fields as a mass sensor.

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