A low fouling electrochemical biosensor based on the zwitterionic polypeptide doped conducting polymer PEDOT for breast cancer marker BRCA1 detection.

Journal: Bioelectrochemistry (Amsterdam, Netherlands)
Published:
Abstract

The application of polypeptides in bio-interfaces and biosensors is of great interest because polypeptides are biocompatible and easy to design. A novel polymer nanocomposite was prepared by the electropolymerization of the conducting polymer poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) with a newly designed polypeptide. The nanocomposite polypeptide doped PEDOT (PEDOT/PEP), with a 3D microporous network structure, large surface area and excellent antifouling ability, was utilized for the attachment of BRCA1 complementary oligonucleotides to construct a DNA biosensor. The fabricated DNA biosensor showed favorable selectivity (with a detection limit of 0.0034 pM) and high sensitivity. The biosensor was also capable of detecting the target DNA (BRCA1) in 1% (V/V) human serum samples. The combination of a conducting polymer PEDOT with an antifouling and biocompatible polypeptide demonstrates a new method for preparing electrochemical sensors, that are capable of detecting targets in complex biological samples without strong nonspecific protein adsorption.

Authors
Jiasheng Wang, Dongwei Wang, Ni Hui
Relevant Conditions

Breast Cancer