Microfluidic Immuno-Biochip for Detection of Breast Cancer Biomarkers Using Hierarchical Composite of Porous Graphene and Titanium Dioxide Nanofibers

Md Azahar Ali, Kunal Mondal, Yueyi Jiao, Seval Oren, Zhen Xu, Ashutosh Sharma, Liang Dong

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

159 Scopus citations

Abstract

We report on a label-free microfluidic immunosensor with femtomolar sensitivity and high selectivity for early detection of epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (EGFR2 or ErbB2) proteins. This sensor utilizes a uniquely structured immunoelectrode made of porous hierarchical graphene foam (GF) modified with electrospun carbon-doped titanium dioxide nanofibers (nTiO2) as an electrochemical working electrode. Due to excellent biocompatibility, intrinsic surface defects, high reaction kinetics, and good stability for proteins, anatase nTiO2 are ideal for electrochemical sensor applications. The three-dimensional and porous features of GF allow nTiO2 to penetrate and attach to the surface of the GF by physical adsorption. Combining GF with functional nTiO2 yields high charge transfer resistance, large surface area, and porous access to the sensing surface by the analyte, resulting in new possibilities for the development of electrochemical immunosensors. Here, the enabling of EDC-NHS chemistry covalently immobilized the antibody of ErbB2 (anti-ErbB2) on the GF-nTiO2 composite. To obtain a compact sensor architecture, the composite working electrode was designed to hang above the gold counter electrode in a microfluidic channel. The sensor underwent differential pulse voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy to quantify breast cancer biomarkers. The two methods had high sensitivities of 0.585 μA μM-1 cm-2 and 43.7 kω μM-1 cm-2 in a wide concentration range of target ErbB2 antigen from 1 × 10-15 M (1.0 fM) to 0.1 × 10-6 M (0.1 μM) and from 1 × 10-13 M (0.1 pM) to 0.1 × 10-6 M (0.1 μM), respectively. Utilization of the specific recognition element, i.e., anti-ErbB2, results in high specificity, even in the presence of identical members of the EGFR family of receptor tyrosine kinases, such as ErbB3 and ErbB4. Many promising applications in the field of electrochemical detection of chemical and biological species will derive from the integration of the porous GF-nTiO2 composite into microfluidic devices.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)20570-20582
Number of pages13
JournalACS Applied Materials and Interfaces
Volume8
Issue number32
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 17 2016
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This work was supported in part by the National Science Foundation under grants ECCS-1102354 and DBI-1353819, and the Iowa State Universitys Plant Sciences Institute. The authors also thank Dr. Warren Straszheim for SEM measurement, Dr. Dapeng Jing for XPS measurement, and to the Department of Science and Technology, New Delhi, India for their support to the Unit on Soft Nanofabrication at Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur.

Keywords

  • biosensor
  • cancer immunodiagnostics
  • carbon-doped titanium dioxide
  • electrochemical detection
  • graphene foam
  • microfluidics

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