Abstract

Microfluidic integration of biosensors enables improved biosensing performance and sophisticated lab-on-a-chip platform design for numerous applications. While soft lithography and polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS)-based microfluidics are still considered the gold standard, 3D-printing has emerged as a promising fabrication alternative for microfluidic systems. Herein, a 3D-printed polyacrylate-based microfluidic platform is integrated for the first time with a label-free porous silicon (PSi)–based optical aptasensor via a facile bonding method. The latter utilizes a UV-curable adhesive as an intermediate layer, while preserving the delicate nanostructure of the porous regions within the microchannels. As a proof-of-concept, a generic model aptasensor for label-free detection of his-tagged proteins is constructed, characterized, and compared to non-microfluidic and PDMS-based microfluidic setups. Detection of the target protein is carried out by real-time monitoring reflectivity changes of the PSi, induced by the target binding to the immobilized aptamers within the porous nanostructure. The microfluidic integrated aptasensor has been successfully used for detection of a model target protein, in the range 0.25 to 18 μM, with a good selectivity and an improved limit of detection, when compared to a non-microfluidic biosensing platform (0.04 μM vs. 2.7 μM, respectively). Furthermore, a superior performance of the 3D-printed microfluidic aptasensor is obtained, compared to a conventional PDMS-based microfluidic platform with similar dimensions.Graphical abstract

Highlights

  • Microfluidic systems and their integration with biosensors are extensively studied for construction of lab-on-a-chip platforms [1, 2]

  • There are only a handful of reports that combine 3D-printed microfluidics with aptasensors [19,20,21], and we present for the first time the integration of a 3D-printed microfluidic device with a generic label-free optical porous silicon (PSi) aptasensor

  • The preferable direct bonding of the microfluidic device to the PSi is not feasible owing the combination of the rough surface of the 3D-printed polyacrylate and the delicate porous nanostructure

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Summary

Introduction

Microfluidic systems and their integration with biosensors are extensively studied for construction of lab-on-a-chip platforms [1, 2]. The microfluidic part is stamped on the adhesive-coated wafer, resulting in adhesive transfer to the microfluidic part, which can be bonded to a second sealing part [15, 16]. This method allows for the creation of a thin (

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