Electrically-receptive and thermally-responsive paper-based sensor chip for rapid detection of bacterial cells

Although significant technological advancements have been made in the development of analytical biosensor chips for detecting bacterial strains (E. coli, S. Mutans and B. Subtilis), critical requirements i.e. limit of detection (LOD), fast time of response, ultra-sensitivity with high reproducibilit...

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Veröffentlicht in:Biosensors & bioelectronics 2018-07, Vol.110, p.132-140
Hauptverfasser: Khan, Muhammad S., Misra, Santosh K., Dighe, Ketan, Wang, Zhen, Schwartz-Duval, Aaron S., Sar, Dinabandhu, Pan, Dipanjan
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Although significant technological advancements have been made in the development of analytical biosensor chips for detecting bacterial strains (E. coli, S. Mutans and B. Subtilis), critical requirements i.e. limit of detection (LOD), fast time of response, ultra-sensitivity with high reproducibility and good shelf-life with robust sensing capability have yet to be met within a single sensor chip. In order to achieve these criteria, we present an electrically-receptive thermally-responsive (ER-TR) sensor chip comprised of simple filter paper used as substrate coated with composite of poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) polymer (PNIPAm) – graphene nanoplatelet (GR) followed by evaporation of Au electrodes for capturing both Gram-positive (S. mutans and B. subtilis) and Gram-negative (E. coli) bacterial cells in real-time. Autoclave water, tap water, lake water and milk samples were tested with ER-TR chip with and without bacterial strains at varying concentration range 101–105 cells/mL. The sensor was integrated with in-house built printed circuit board (PCB) to transmit/receive electrical signals. The interaction of E. coli, S. mutans and B. subtilis cells with fibers of PNIPAm-GR resulted in a change of electrical resistance and the readout was monitored wirelessly in real-time using MATLAB algorithm. Finally, prepared ER-TR chip exhibited the reproducibility of 85–97% with shelf-life of up to four weeks after testing with lake water sample. •Paper-Based Graphene-PNIPAm-Au sensor chip was developed as an integrated device.•Bacterial cells were captured by fibers of GR-PNIPAm without using antibody conjugation.•LCST of PNIPAm was controlled electrically using embedded IDµE on chip.•Reproducibility of 85–97% and shelf life of up to 3 weeks were achieved.•The platform tested for robustness with various bacterial strains and environmental or food samples.
ISSN:0956-5663
1873-4235
DOI:10.1016/j.bios.2018.03.044