Biosensors
with two-dimensional materials have gained wide interest
due to their high sensitivity. Among them, single-layer MoS2 has become a new class of biosensing platform owing to its semiconducting
property. Immobilization of bioprobes directly onto the MoS2 surface with chemical bonding or random physisorption has been widely
studied. However, these approaches potentially cause a reduction of
conductivity and sensitivity of the biosensor. In this work, we designed
peptides that spontaneously align into monomolecular-thick nanostructures
on electrochemical MoS2 transistors in a non-covalent fashion
and act as a biomolecular scaffold for efficient biosensing. These
peptides consist of repeated domains of glycine and alanine in the
sequence and form self-assembled structures with sixfold symmetry
templated by the lattice of MoS2. We investigated electronic
interactions of self-assembled peptides with MoS2 by designing
their amino acid sequence with charged amino acids at both ends. Charged
amino acids in the sequence showed a correlation with the electrical
properties of single-layer MoS2, where negatively charged
peptides caused a shift of threshold voltage in MoS2 transistors
and neutral and positively charged peptides had no significant effect
on the threshold voltage. The transconductance of transistors had
no decrease due to the self-assembled peptides, indicating that aligned
peptides can act as a biomolecular scaffold without degrading the
intrinsic electronic properties for biosensing. We also investigated
the impact of peptides on the photoluminescence (PL) of single-layer
MoS2 and found that the PL intensity changed sensitively
depending on the amino acid sequence of peptides. Finally, we demonstrated
a femtomolar-level sensitivity of biosensing using biotinylated peptides
to detect streptavidin.
Here we demonstrate that short peptides, de novo designed from the first principles, self-assemble on the surface of graphite to produce highly robust and catalytic nanoarchitechture, which promotes peroxidation reactions...
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