Resolving the Heterogeneous Adsorption of Antibody Fragment on a 2D Layered Molybdenum Disulfide by Super-Resolution Imaging.
Teng-Xiang HuangMeek YangHannah GiangBin DongNing FangPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2022)
The development of nanomaterials such as two-dimensional (2D) layered materials advanced applications in many fields, including biosensors format based on field-effect transistors. The unique physical and chemical properties of 2D layered materials enable the detection limit of biomolecules as low as ∼1 pg/mL. The majority of 2D layered materials contain different structural features and defects introduced in chemical synthesis and fabrication processing. These structural features have different physicochemical properties, causing heterogeneous adsorption of bioreceptors like antibodies, enzymes, etc. Understanding the correlation between the adsorption of bioreceptors and properties of structural features is essential for building highly efficient, sensitive biosensors based on 2D layered materials. Here, we utilize a single-molecule localization-based super-resolved fluorescence imaging method to unveil the inhomogeneous adsorption of antibody fragments on 2D layered molybdenum disulfide (MoS 2 ). The surface coverage of antibody fragments on MoS 2 thin flakes is quantitatively measured and compared at different structural features and different layer thicknesses. The methodology in the current work can be extended to study bioreceptor adsorption on other types of 2D layered materials and pave a way to improve biosensors' sensitivity based on defect engineering 2D layered materials.