Abstract

Biofouling has been a substantial burden on biomarker analysis in complex biological media, leading to poor sensitivity and selectivity or even malfunction of the sensing devices. In this work, an electrochemical biosensor with excellent antifouling ability and high stability was fabricated based on amyloid-like bovine serum albumin (AL-BSA) crosslinked with the conducting polymer polyaniline (PANI). Compared with the crosslinked conventional bovine serum albumin (BSA), the crosslinked AL-BSA exhibited enhanced antifouling capability, and it was able to form an effective antifouling film within a significantly short reaction time. With further immobilization of immunoglobulin M (IgM) antibodies onto the prepared AL-BSA surface via the formation of amide bonds, an electrochemical biosensor capable of assaying IgM in human serum samples with superior selectivity and sensitivity was constructed. The biosensor exhibited excellent antifouling performance even in 100% human serum, a low limit of detection down to 2.32 pg mL-1, and acceptable accuracy for real sample analysis compared with the standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay for IgM detection. This strategy of using AL-BSA to construct antifouling sensing interfaces provided a reliable diagnostic method for the detection of a series of protein biomarkers in complex biological media.

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