Decoration of Reduced
Graphene Oxide Nanosheets with
Aryldiazonium Salts and Gold Nanoparticles toward a Label-Free Amperometric
Immunosensor for Detecting Cytokine Tumor Necrosis Factor‑α
in Live Cells
posted on 2016-09-07, 00:00authored byMeng Qi, Yin Zhang, Chaomin Cao, Mingxing Zhang, Shenghua Liu, Guozhen Liu
In this study, a label-free electrochemical
immunosensor was developed
for detection of cytokine tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-α).
First, AuNPs loaded reduced graphene oxides nanocomposites (RGO-ph-AuNP)
were prepared, and then, a mixed layer of 4-carbxyphenyl and 4-aminophenyl
phosphorylcholine (PPC) was modified to the surface of AuNPs for the
subsequent modification of anti-TNF-α capture antibody (Ab1) to form the capture surface (Au-RGO-ph-AuNP-ph-PPC(-ph-COOH))
for the analyte TNF-α with the antifouling property. For reporting
the presence of analyte, the anti-TNF-α detection antibody (Ab2) was modified to the graphene oxides which have been modified
with the 4-ferrocenylaniline through diazonium chemistry to form Ab2-GO-ph-Fc. Then, a sandwich assay was formed on gold surfaces
for the quantitative detection of TNF-α based on the electrochemical
signal of ferrocene. X-ray photoelectron spectra (XPS), transmission
electron microscopy (TEM), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy
(FT-IR), UV–vis, and electrochemistry were used for characterization
of the stepwise fabrications on the interface. The prepared electrochemical
immunosensor was successfully used for the detection of TNF-α
over the range of 0.1–150 pg mL–1. The lowest
detection limit of this immunosensor is 0.1 pg mL–1 TNF-α in 50 mM phosphate buffer at pH 7.0. The fabricated
immunosensor provided high selectivity and stability and can be used
to detect TNF-α secreted by live BV-2 cells with comparable
accuracy to enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) but with lower
limit of detection.