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A highly sensitive molecular structural probe applied to in situ biosensing of metabolites using PEDOT:PSS

Authors :
Tan, Ellasia
Pappa, Anna-Maria
Pitsalidis, Charalampos
Nightingale, James
Wood, Sebastian
Castro, Fernando A
Owens, Róisín M
Kim, Ji-Seon
Tan, Ellasia [0000-0002-8225-9045]
Pappa, Anna-Maria [0000-0002-7980-4073]
Pitsalidis, Charalampos [0000-0003-3978-9865]
Nightingale, James [0000-0002-6412-979X]
Wood, Sebastian [0000-0002-8574-0475]
Castro, Fernando A [0000-0002-2409-8300]
Owens, Róisín M [0000-0001-7856-2108]
Kim, Ji-Seon [0000-0003-4715-3656]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
Source :
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

A large amount of research within organic biosensors is dominated by organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) that use conducting polymers such as poly(3,4-ethylene dioxythiophene doped with poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS). Despite the recent advances in OECT-based biosensors, the sensing is solely reliant on the amperometric detection of the bioanalytes. This is typically accompanied by large undesirable parasitic electrical signals from the electroactive components in the electrolyte. Herein, we present the use of in-situ resonance Raman spectroscopy to probe subtle molecular structural changes of PEDOT:PSS associated with its doping level. We demonstrate how such doping level changes of PEDOT:PSS can be used, for the first time, on operational OECTs for sensitive and selective metabolite sensing whilst simultaneously performing amperometric detection of the analyte. We test the sensitivity by molecularly sensing a lowest glucose concentration of 0.02 mM in phosphate buffered saline (PBS) solution. By changing the electrolyte to cell culture media, the selectivity of in-situ resonance Raman spectroscopy is emphasized as it remains unaffected by other electroactive components in the electrolyte. The application of this molecular structural probe highlights the importance of developing biosensing probes that benefit from high sensitivity of the material's structural and electrical properties whilst being complimentary with the electronic methods of detection.

Details

ISSN :
10970290 and 00063592
Volume :
117
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Biotechnology and Bioengineering
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c00c22a0f788461470a1c97cdd14c708
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/bit.27187