posted on 2024-07-05, 13:06authored bySebastian Cajigas, Arthur M. de Jong, Junhong Yan, Menno W. J. Prins
Biosensing by particle
motion is a biosensing technology
that relies
on single-molecule interactions and enables the continuous monitoring
of analytes from picomolar to micromolar concentration levels. However,
during sensor operation, the signals are observed to change gradually.
Here, we present a comprehensive methodology to elucidate the molecular
origins of long-term changes in a particle motion sensor, focusing
on a competitive sensor design under conditions without flow. Experiments
were performed wherein only the particles or only the surfaces were
aged in order to clarify how each individual component changes over
time. Furthermore, distributions of particle motion patterns and switching
activity were studied to reveal how particle populations change over
timespans of several days. For a cortisol sensor with anticortisol
antibodies on the particles and cortisol analogues on the sensing
surface, the leading hypotheses for the long-term changes are (i)
that the particles lose antibodies and develop nonspecific interactions
and (ii) that analogue molecules dissociate from the sensing surface.
The developed methodologies and the acquired insights pave a way for
realizing sensors that can operate over long timespans.