4.8 Article

Rapid, Label-Free, Electrical Whole Blood Bioassay Based on Nanobiosensor Systems

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 5, Issue 12, Pages 9883-9891

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn2035796

Keywords

biosensor; nanowire; whole blood detection; cancer biomarker detection

Funding

  1. L.K. Whittier Foundation
  2. National Institutes of Health
  3. National Science Foundation [CCF-0726815, 5RO1EB8275, CCF-0702204]

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Biomarker detection based on nanowire biosensors has attracted a significant amount of research effort in recent years. However, only very limited research work has been directed toward biomarker detection directly from physiological fluids mainly because of challenges caused by the complexity of media. This limitation significantly reduces the practical impact generated by the aforementioned nanobiosensors. In this study, we demonstrate an In2O3 nanowire-based biosensing system that is capable of performing rapid, label-free, electrical detection of cancer biomarkers directly from human whole blood collected by a finger prick. Passivating the nanowire surface successfully blocked the signal induced by nonspecific binding when performing active measurement in whole blood. Passivated devices showed markedly smaller signals induced by nonspecific binding of proteins and other biomaterials in serum and higher sensitivity to target biomarkers than bare devices. The detection limit of passivated sensors for biomarkers in whole blood was similar to the detection limit for the same analyte in purified buffer solutions at the same ionic strength, suggesting minimal decrease In device performance in the complex media. We then demonstrated detection of multiple cancer biomarkers with high reliability at clinically meaningful concentrations from whole blood collected by a finger pick using this sensing system.

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