Ultrasensitive detection of aromatic water pollutants through protein immobilization driven organic electrochemical transistors.
Subhankar SahuLokesh KumarSumita DasDipti GuptaRuchi AnandPublished in: Chemical science (2023)
Xenobiotic aromatic water pollutants pose an extreme threat to environmental sustainability. Due to the lack of detectable functional groups in these compounds and scarcity of selective bio-recognition scaffolds, easy-to-use sensing strategies capable of on-site detection remain unavailable. Herein, to address this lacune , we entail a strategy that combines biosensor scaffolds with organic electronics to create a compact device for environmental aromatic pollution monitoring. As proof of principle, a sensor module capable of rapid, economic, reliable, and ultrasensitive detection of phenol down to 2 ppb (0.02 μM) was designed wherein biosensing protein MopR was coupled with an organic electrochemical transistor (OECT). For effective interfacing of the sensing scaffold MopR, graphene oxide (GO) nanosheets were optimized as a host immobilization matrix. The MopR-GO immobilized sensor module was subsequently substituted as the gate electrode with PEDOT:PSS serving as an organic semiconductor material. The resulting OECT sensor provided a favourable microenvironment for protein activity, maintaining high specificity. Exclusive phenol detection with minimal loss of sensitivity (<5% error) could be achieved in both complex pollutant mixtures and real environmental samples. This fabrication strategy that amalgamates biological biosensors with organic electronics harnesses the potential to achieve detection of a host of emerging pollutants.
Keyphrases
- label free
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- gold nanoparticles
- amino acid
- heavy metals
- real time pcr
- quantum dots
- stem cells
- human health
- ionic liquid
- water soluble
- sensitive detection
- small molecule
- molecularly imprinted
- binding protein
- mass spectrometry
- reduced graphene oxide
- particulate matter
- molecular docking
- capillary electrophoresis
- drinking water