4.8 Article

Chemical Redox Cycling in an Organic Photoelectrochemical Transistor: Toward Dual Chemical and Electronic Amplification for Bioanalysis

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 95, Issue 48, Pages 17912-17919

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c04263

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This work combines chemical amplification with electronic amplification in the organic photoelectrochemical transistor (OPECT), achieving dual-amplified bioanalysis and sensitive detection of human immunoglobulin G. The study is significant for OPECT bioanalysis.
The organic photoelectrochemical transistor (OPECT) has been proven to be a promising platform to study the rich light-matter-bio interplay toward advanced biomolecular detection, yet current OPECT is highly restrained to its intrinsic electronic amplification. Herein, this work first combines chemical amplification with electronic amplification in OPECT for dual-amplified bioanalytics with high current gain, which is exemplified by human immunoglobulin G (HIgG)-dependent sandwich immunorecognition and subsequent alkaline phosphatase (ALP)-mediated chemical redox cycling (CRC) on a metal-organic framework (MOF)-derived BiVO4/WO3 gate. The target-dependent redox cycling of ascorbic acid (AA) acting as an effective electron donor could lead to an amplified modulation against the polymer channel, as indicated by the channel current. The as-developed bioanalysis could achieve sensitive HIgG detection with a good analytical performance. This work features the dual chemical and electronic amplification for OPECT bioanalysis and is expected to stimulate further interest in the design of CRC-assisted OPECT bioassays.

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