Redox Buffering Effects in Potentiometric Detection
of DNA Using Thiol-Modified Gold Electrodes
Posted on 2021-06-29 - 11:33
Label-free potentiometric
detection of DNA molecules using a field-effect
transistor (FET) with a gold gate offers an electrical sensing platform
for rapid, straightforward, and inexpensive analyses of nucleic acid
samples. To induce DNA hybridization on the FET sensor surface to
enable potentiometric detection, probe DNA that is complementary to
the target DNA has to be immobilized on the FET gate surface. A common
method for probe DNA functionalization is based on thiol–gold
chemistry, immobilizing thiol-modified probe DNA on a gold gate with
thiol–gold bonds. A self-assembled monolayer (SAM), based on
the same thiol–gold chemistry, is also needed to passivate
the rest of the gold gate surface to prevent non-specific adsorption
and to enable favorable steric configuration of the probe DNA. Herein,
the applicability of such FET-based potentiometric DNA sensing was
carefully investigated, using a silicon nanoribbon FET with a gold-sensing
gate modified with thiol–gold chemistry. We discover that the
potential of the gold-sensing electrode is determined by the mixed
potential of the gold–thiol and gold–oxygen redox interactions.
This mixed potential gives rise to a redox buffer effect which buffers
the change in the surface charge induced by the DNA hybridization,
thus suppressing the potentiometric signal. Analogous redox buffer
effects may also be present for other types of potentiometric detections
of biomarkers based on thiol–gold chemistry.
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Xu, Xingxing; Yu, Yingtao; Hu, Qitao; Chen, Si; Nyholm, Leif; Zhang, Zhen (2021). Redox Buffering Effects in Potentiometric Detection
of DNA Using Thiol-Modified Gold Electrodes. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.0c02700