Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1163723 Analytica Chimica Acta 2015 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

•A bismuth citrate-modified screen-printed immunosensor was developed.•PbS quantum dots labels were used in the sandwich immunoassay for CRP determination.•A Bi film was formed at the sensor surface during the preconcentration step of Pb.•The immunosensor minimizes the limitations of electroplated metal film electrodes.

A novel immunosensor based on graphite screen-printed electrodes (SPEs) modified with bismuth citrate was developed for the voltammetric determination of C-reactive protein (CRP) in human serum using quantum dots (QDs) labels. The sandwich-type immunoassay involved physisorption of CRP capture antibody on the surface of the sensor, sequential immunoreactions with CRP and biotinylated CRP reporter antibody and finally reaction with streptavidin-conjugated PbS QDs. The quantification of the target protein was performed with acidic dissolution of the PbS QDs and anodic stripping voltammetric detection of the Pb(II) released. Detection was performed at bismuth nanodomains formed on the sensor surface during the electrolytic preconcentration step, as bismuth citrate was reduced to metallic bismuth simultaneously with the deposition of Pb on the surface of the immunosensor. Under optimal conditions, the response was linear over the range 0.2–100 ng mL−1 CRP and the limit of detection was 0.05 ng mL−1 CRP. Since the modified SPE serves as both the biorecognition element and the QDs reader, the analytical procedure is simplified, the drawbacks of existing electroplated immunosensors are minimized while the proposed disposable sensing platform provides convenient, low-cost and ultrasensitive detection of proteins and wider scope for mass-production.

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Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Analytical Chemistry
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