portability, ease of use, and affordability, biochemical sensors are increasingly benefiting from the development of electronic technologies. In particular, the application of field-effect transistors (FETs) for biochemical sensing has attracted the attention of scientists since the demonstration of the ion-sensitive FET (ISFET) functionality. [1] FETs are capable of direct, label-free transduction of biochemical signals into electrical quantities and provide a local amplification that simplifies signal acquisition and processing. In addition, the specific properties of electronic technologies make this class of sensors ideal for the development of integrated, portable, user-friendly and affordable sensing systems. As FET-based biochemical sensors (namely bioFETs or chemFETs) are successfully used for broad biochemical sensing applications, [2][3][4] research has focused on providing these devices with novel properties that incorporate innovations of electronic technologies and materials science. In particular, mechanical flexibility and optical transparency are important for advanced biosensing devices. Mechanical flexibility ensures the possibility of adapting devices to complex shapes, and this property is fundamental to the development of new classes of Lab-on-a-Chip devices, [5][6][7] and more so for Point-of-Care, wearable, [8][9][10] or even implantable instrumentation. [11] Optical transparency is also crucial for device integration with wearable elements, [12] as well as when the integration of electronic and optical characterization is fundamental, such as in cell culturing or in medical applications, where optical inspection of analytes is fundamental. [13,14] In this sense, graphene and its derivatives have attracted the interest of the scientific community, because of their electrical properties, mechanical flexibility, robustness, durability, and transparency. Moreover, several studies have confirmed the biocompatibility and low cytotoxicity of graphene derivatives, [15] which makes them extremely attractive for biosensing applications. With respect to other conductive materials, graphene is highly stable and can be deposited by means of large-area processes, even by solution process techniques. State-of-theart, graphene-based bio-, and chemFETs have been reported for several applications, ranging from pH [16][17][18] and chemical This paper presents a novel chemical sensor that combines an organic, floating gate field-effect transistor and a functional graphene electrode, aimed at realizing the basic building block for novel biomedical sensor systems. A non-covalent functionalization of graphene with sensing peptides bearing a pyrene moiety is described as a way to provide graphene with chemical responsivity without affecting its electronic and optical features. Given the special properties of the materials and technologies used, and the intrinsic multi-modality of the active device, it is possible to develop a complete range of chemosensing devices by varying the chemical specificity of the immobi...