4.6 Review

Advances in Electrochemical Biosensor Technologies for the Detection of Nucleic Acid Breast Cancer Biomarkers

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 23, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s23084128

Keywords

cancer biomarker; breast cancer; microRNA; mi-RNA; miR-21; miR-155; BRCA1; electrochemistry; electrochemical biosensor

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Breast cancer is a major cause of cancer deaths in women globally and there is a need for the discovery and characterization of diagnostic biomarkers. Circulating cell-free nucleic acids such as miRNAs and BRCA1 can be used for genetic profiling and screening of breast cancer patients. Electrochemical biosensors provide sensitive and cost-effective platforms for detecting breast cancer biomarkers.
Breast cancer is the second leading cause of cancer deaths in women worldwide; therefore, there is an increased need for the discovery, development, optimization, and quantification of diagnostic biomarkers that can improve the disease diagnosis, prognosis, and therapeutic outcome. Circulating cell-free nucleic acids biomarkers such as microRNAs (miRNAs) and breast cancer susceptibility gene 1 (BRCA1) allow the characterization of the genetic features and screening breast cancer patients. Electrochemical biosensors offer excellent platforms for the detection of breast cancer biomarkers due to their high sensitivity and selectivity, low cost, use of small analyte volumes, and easy miniaturization. In this context, this article provides an exhaustive review concerning the electrochemical methods of characterization and quantification of different miRNAs and BRCA1 breast cancer biomarkers using electrochemical DNA biosensors based on the detection of hybridization events between a DNA or peptide nucleic acid probe and the target nucleic acid sequence. The fabrication approaches, the biosensors architectures, the signal amplification strategies, the detection techniques, and the key performance parameters, such as the linearity range and the limit of detection, were discussed.

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