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Woven Electroanalytical Biosensor for Nucleic Acid Amplification Tests.

Shirin KhaliliazarIngrid Öberg MånssonAndrew PiperLiangqi OuyangPedro RéuMahiar Max Hamedi
Published in: Advanced healthcare materials (2021)
Fiber-based biosensors enable a new approach in analytical diagnostic devices. The majority of textile-based biosensors, however, rely on colorimetric detection. Here a woven biosensor that integrates microfluidics structures in combination with an electroanalytical readout based on a thiol-self-assembled monolayer (SAM) for Nucleic Acid Amplification Testing, NAATs is shown. Two types of fiber-based electrodes are systematically characterized: pure gold microwires (bond wire) and off-the-shelf plasma gold-coated polyester multifilament threads to evaluate their potential to form SAMs on their surface and their electrochemical performance in woven textile. A woven electrochemical DNA (E-DNA) sensor using a SAM-based stem-loop probe-modified gold microwire is fabricated. These sensors can specifically detect unpurified, isothermally amplified genomic DNA of Staphylococcus epidermidis (10 copies/µL) by recombinase polymerase amplification (RPA). This work demonstrates that textile-based biosensors have the potential for integrating and being employed as automated, sample-to-answer analytical devices for point-of-care (POC) diagnostics.
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