Recent advances in nanotechnology have enabled the development of nanoscale sensors that outperform conventional biosensors. This review summarizes the nanoscale biosensors that use aptamers as molecular recognition elements. The advantages of aptamers over antibodies as sensors are highlighted. These advantages are especially apparent with electrical sensors such as electrochemical sensors or those using field-effect transistors.
The presence of microorganisms, such as Escherichia coli, Salmonella, Listeria, and Vibrio, in food can be a serious threat to health, especially for infants, the elderly, and immunodeficient patients. The most reliable and accurate method for detecting food-borne pathogens is the conventional culture method, which includes a culture process and phenotypic or metabolic fingerprinting. [1] However, this method has the drawbacks that it is labor-intensive and requires at least 1-2 days to identify the pathogen(s). Therefore, researchers are looking for new methods that are fast, inexpensive, lightweight, and highly sensitive. Nanotechnology combined with biotechnology could potentially form the basis for such a method, and there have been efforts to develop fast and ultrasensitive nanosensors that can detect pathogens. To date, various platforms for pathogen detection have been developed, including metallic striped nanowires, [2] fluorescent nanobarcodes, [3] nanoparticles, [4,5] nanoelectromechanical systems (NEMs), [6] and microfluidic modules. [7,8] Herein, we demonstrate a screening tool for microorganisms such as E. coli, based on aptamer-functionalized single-walled carbon-nanotube field-effect transistor (SWNT-FET) arrays combined with the most probable number (MPN) method. Nanoscale biosensors based on FETs have been shown to be sufficiently sensitive to detect single viruses, [9] tumor-specific antigens, [10,11] and small molecules. [12] Moreover, in a previous study we showed that aptamer-functionalized SWNT-FET sensors can be used as sensitive, recyclable biosensors. [13] Nanosensors require only very small sample volumes (on the order of microliters), a characteristic that is advantageous in many instances but which can be a problem for inhomogeneous samples. Specifically, the probability that a collection of microorganisms in water will be distributed perfectly uniformly throughout the solution is very low. For example, if a 1-mL solution contains 10 3 E. coli cells, it does not necessarily mean that every 1-mL aliquot of the solution contains a single cell; rather, some aliquots will contain more than one cell, and others will not contain any cells. Thus, although each aliquot contains a single E. coli cell on average, there is a high possibility of recording a false signal if only a small volume of the solution is sampled. Microfluidic channels combined with nanosensors can solve this problem to some extent, but the volumes used are too small to avoid statistical errors. Moreover, motile bacteria such as E. coli can move at % 20 mm s À1 in a favorable medium, [14] which increases the difficulty of detecting these microorganisms using sensors with nanometer-sized sensing areas.Microbiologists have solved this problem by using a simple method called MPN. [15] First developed in 1933, MPN is still considered to be an important technique in estimating microbial populations in soils, waters, the food industry, etc. In MPN, to determine the cell titer in a particular solution, that solution is diluted at l...
We describe the observation of photoconductivity and enhanced memory effects in graphene devices functionalized with clusters of alkylated C(60) molecules. The alkylated C(60) clusters were adsorbed on chemical vapor deposition-grown graphene devices from an aprotic medium. The resulting alkylated C(60)-graphene hybrid devices showed reproducible photoconductive behavior originating from the electron-accepting nature of the C(60) molecules. Significantly enhanced gate hysteresis was observed upon illumination with visible light, thereby enabling the use of C(60)-graphene hybrid devices in three-terminal photo-memory applications.
Articles you may be interested in Effects of graphene thickness on the electrical properties of carbon nanotube field effect transistors with graphene contacts
To elucidate the effect of the work function on the position of the Dirac point, we fabricated graphene devices with asymmetric metal contacts. By measuring the peak position of the resistance for each pair of metal electrodes, we obtained the voltage of the Dirac pointVgDirac(V) from the gate response. We found that the position ofVgDirac(V) in the hybrid devices was significantly influenced by the type of metal electrode. The measured shifts inVgDirac(V) were closely related to the modified work functions of the metal-graphene complexes. Within a certain bias range, the Fermi level of one of the contacts aligned with the electron band and that of the other contact aligned with the hole band.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.