A versatile 3D printed multi-electrode cell for determination of three COVID-19 biomarkers

3D-printing has shown an outstanding performance for the production of versatile electrochemical devices. However, there is a lack of studies in the field of 3D-printed miniaturized settings for multiplex biosensing. In this work, we propose a fully 3D-printed micro-volume cell containing six workin...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytica chimica acta 2023-06, Vol.1258, p.341169-341169, Article 341169
Hauptverfasser: de Matos Morawski, Franciele, Martins, Gustavo, Ramos, Maria Karolina, Zarbin, Aldo J.G., Blanes, Lucas, Bergamini, Marcio F., Marcolino-Junior, Luiz Humberto
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:3D-printing has shown an outstanding performance for the production of versatile electrochemical devices. However, there is a lack of studies in the field of 3D-printed miniaturized settings for multiplex biosensing. In this work, we propose a fully 3D-printed micro-volume cell containing six working electrodes (WEs) that operates with 250 μL of sample. A polylactic acid/carbon black conductive filament (PLA/CB) was used to print the WEs and subsequently modified with graphene oxide (GO), to support protein binding. Cyclic voltammetry was employed to investigate the electrochemical behaviour of the novel multi-electrode cell. In the presence of K₃[Fe(CN)₆], PLA/CB/GO showed adequate peak resolution for subsequent label-free immunosensing. The innovative 3D-printed cell was applied for multiplex voltammetric detection of three COVID-19 biomarkers as a proof-of-concept. The multiple sensors showed a wide linear range with detection limits of 5, 1 and 1 pg mL−1 for N-protein, SRBD-protein, and anti-SRBD, respectively. The sensor performance enabled the selective sequential detection of N protein, SRBD protein, and anti-SRBD at biological levels in saliva and serum. In summary, the miniaturized six-electrode cell presents an alternative for the low-cost and fast production of customizable devices for multi-target sensing with promising application in the development of point-of-care sensors. [Display omitted] •A fully 3D-printed six-working electrode cell is proposed for detection of biomarkers.•The working electrodes were printed with polylactic acid and carbon black.•Detection of three COVID-19 biomarkers is investigated, aiming to achieve the whole viral window.•The 3D-printed set-up allowed the detection of N protein, SRBD protein and anti-SRBD.•The multiplex sensors were selective to serum and saliva samples.
ISSN:0003-2670
1873-4324
DOI:10.1016/j.aca.2023.341169