Login / Signup

Challenges and Solutions in Developing Ultrasensitive Biosensors.

Yanfang WuRichard David TilleyJohn Justin Gooding
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
This Perspective focuses on the latest strategies and challenges for the development of bioanalytical sensors with sub-picomolar detection limits. Achieving sub-picomolar detection limits has three major challenges: (1) assay sensitivity, (2) response time, and (3) selectivity (including limiting background signals). Each of these challenges is discussed, along with how nanomaterials provide the solutions. One strategy to gain greater sensitivity involves confining the sensing volume to the nanoscale, as used in nanopore- or nanoparticle-based sensors, because nanoparticles are ubiquitous in amplification. Methods to improve response time typically focus on obtaining an intimate mixture between the sensor and the sample either by extending the length scale of nanoscale sensors using nanostructuring or by dispersing magnetic nanoparticles through the sample to capture the analyte. Loading nanoparticles with many biorecognition species is one solution to help address the challenge of selectivity. Many examples in this Perspective explore the detection of prostate-specific antigen which enables a comparison between strategies. Finally, exciting future opportunities in developing single-molecule sensors and the requirements to go even lower in concentration are explored.
Keyphrases
  • single molecule
  • label free
  • atomic force microscopy
  • low cost
  • magnetic nanoparticles
  • loop mediated isothermal amplification
  • real time pcr
  • living cells
  • nucleic acid
  • high resolution
  • structural basis