Dual-Frequency, Ratiometric Approaches to EAB Sensor Interrogation Support the Calibration-Free Measurement of Specific Molecules In Vivo.
Elsi MynttinenJulian GersonKaylyn LeungTod E KippinKevin William PlaxcoPublished in: ACS sensors (2024)
Electrochemical aptamer-based (EAB) sensors represent the first molecular measurement technology that is both (1) independent of the chemical reactivity of the target, and thus generalizable to many targets and (2) able to function in an accurate, drift-corrected manner in situ in the living body. Signaling in EAB sensors is generated when an electrode-bound aptamer binds to its target ligand, altering the rate of electron transfer from an attached redox reporter and producing an easily detectable change in peak current when the sensor is interrogated using square wave voltammetry. Due to differences in the microscopic surface area of the interrogating electrodes, the baseline peak currents obtained from EAB sensors, however, can be highly variable. To overcome this, we have historically performed single-point calibration using measurements performed in a single sample of known target concentration. Here, however, we explore approaches to EAB sensor operation that negate the need to perform even single-point calibration of individual sensors. These are a ratiometric approach employing the ratio of the peak currents observed at two distinct square wave frequencies, and a kinetic differential measurement approach that employs the difference between peak currents seen at the two frequencies. Using in vivo measurements of vancomycin and phenylalanine as our test bed, we compared the output of these methods with that of the same sensor when single-point calibration was employed. Doing so we find that both methods support accurately drift-corrected measurements in vivo in live rats, even when employing rather crudely handmade devices. By removing the need to calibrate each individual sensor in a sample of known target concentration, these interrogation methods should significantly simplify the use of EAB sensors for in vivo applications.