Electrical detection of C-reactive protein using a single free-standing, thermally controlled piezoresistive microcantilever for highly reproducible and accurate measurements
Journal
Sensors (Switzerland)
Journal Volume
13
Journal Issue
8
Pages
9653-9668
Date Issued
2013
Author(s)
Abstract
This study demonstrates a novel method for electrical detection of C-reactive protein (CRP) as a means of identifying an infection in the body, or as a cardiovascular disease risk assay. The method uses a single free-standing, thermally controlled piezoresistive microcantilever biosensor. In a commonly used sensing arrangement of conventional dual cantilevers in the Wheatstone bridge circuit, reference and gold-coated sensing cantilevers that inherently have heterogeneous surface materials and different multilayer structures may yield independent responses to the liquid environmental changes of chemical substances, flow field and temperature, leading to unwanted signal disturbance for biosensing targets. In this study, the single free-standing microcantilever for biosensing applications is employed to resolve the dual-beam problem of individual responses in chemical solutions and, in a thermally controlled system, to maintain its sensor performance due to the sensitive temperature effect. With this type of single temperature-controlled microcantilever sensor, the electrical detection of various CRP concentrations from 1 μg/mL to 200 μg/mL was performed, which covers the clinically relevant range. Induced surface stresses were measured at between 0.25 N/m and 3.4 N/m with high reproducibility. Moreover, the binding affinity (KD) of CRP and anti-CRP interaction was found to be 18.83 ± 2.99 μg/mL, which agreed with results in previous reported studies. This biosensing technique thus proves valuable in detecting inflammation, and in cardiovascular disease risk assays. ? 2013 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.
Subjects
Biosensor; C-reactive protein; Mems; Piezoresistive microcantilever; Reproducibility
SDGs
Other Subjects
Assays; Binding energy; Biosensors; Bridge circuits; Diseases; MEMS; Nanocantilevers; Sensors; Biosensing applications; C-reactive proteins; Cardio-vascular disease; Micro cantilever sensors; Piezoresistive microcantilever; Piezoresistive microcantilever biosensors; Reproducibilities; Wheatstone bridge circuits; Composite micromechanics
Type
journal article