Published February 12, 2014
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An impedimetric study of DNA hybridization on paper-supported inkjet-printed gold electrodes
Description
In this study, two different supramolecular recognition architectures for impedimetric detection
of DNA hybridization have been formed on disposable paper-supported inkjet-printed gold
electrodes. The gold electrodes were fabricated using a gold nanoparticle based ink. The first
recognition architecture consists of subsequent layers of biotinylated self-assembly monolayer
(SAM), streptavidin and biotinylated DNA probe. The other recognition architecture is constructed by immobilization of thiol-functionalized DNA probe (HSDNA) and subsequent
backfill with 11mercapto1undecanol (MUOH) SAM. The binding capacity and selectivity
of the recognition architectures were examined by surface plasmon resonance (SPR)
measurements. SPR results showed that the HSDNA/MUOH system had a higher binding
capacity for the complementary DNA target. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS)
measurements showed that the hybridization can be detected with impedimetric spectroscopy
in picomol range for both systems. EIS signal indicated a good selectivity for both recognition
architectures, whereas SPR showed very high unspecific binding for the HSDNA/MUOH
system. The factors affecting the impedance signal were interpreted in terms of the complexity
of the supramolecular architecture. The more complex architecture acts as a less ideal
capacitive sensor and the impedance signal is dominated by the resistive elements.
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