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Nonoptical Detection of Allergic Response with a Cell-Coupled Gate Field-Effect Transistor.

Haoyue YangMasatoshi HondaAkiko SaitoTaira KajisaYuhki YanaseToshiya Sakata
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2017)
In this study, we report the label-free and reliable detection of allergic response using a cell-coupled gate field-effect transistor (cell-based FET). Rat basophilic leukemia (RBL-2H3) cells were cultured as a signal transduction interface to induce allergic reaction on the gate oxide surface of the FET, because IgE antibodies, which bind to Fcε receptors at the RBL-2H3 cell membrane, are specifically cross-linked by allergens, resulting in the allergic response of RBL-2H3 cells. In fact, the surface potential at the FET gate decreased owing to secretions such as histamine from the IgE-bound RBL-2H3 cells, which reacted with the allergen. This is because histamine, as one of the candidate secretions, shows basicity, resulting in a change in pH around the cell/gate interface. That is, the RBL-2H3-cell-based FET used in this study was originally from an ion-sensitive FET (ISFET), whose oxide surface (Ta2O5) with hydroxyl groups is fully responsive to pH on the basis of the equilibrium reaction. The allergic response of RBL-2H3 cells on the gate was also confirmed by estimating the amount of β-hexosaminidase released together with histamine and was analyzed using the electrical properties based on an inflammatory response of secreted histamine with the vascular endothelial cell-based FET. Thus, the allergic responses were monitored in a nonoptical and real-time manner using the cell-based FETs with the cellular layers on the gate, which reproduced the in vivo system and were useful for the reliable detection of the allergic reaction.
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