Abstract

Ultrasensitive and low-fouling microRNA electrochemical biosensors were successfully constructed by introducing thiol-terminated antifouling molecules (peptide sequence, polyethylene glycol, or mercapto alcohol) onto the surface of polyaniline-modified electrodes. For the three kinds of antifouling materials investigated, the newly designed and synthesized peptide exhibited superior antifouling ability to others, and it could effectively reduce the nonspecific adsorption of proteins and even prevent the fouling effect of serum. Compared with microRNA biosensors without antifouling capability, or those modified with polyethylene glycol or mercapto alcohol, the biosensor modified with the designed zwitterionic peptide showed the highest specificity for single-base mismatch, three-base mismatch, and completely complementary microRNAs. Most interestingly, the experimental results indicated that the introduction of antifouling molecules to the sensing interfaces did not significantly change the sensitivity of the biosensor. The strategy of constructing antifouling biosensors based on newly synthesized zwitterionic peptides and conducting polymers can be promisingly extended to the development of other electrochemical sensors and biosensors without encountering biofouling. Graphical abstract Ultrasensitive and low-fouling microRNA electrochemical biosensors were constructed by introducing thiol-terminated antifouling molecules (peptide sequence, polyethylene glycol, or mercapto alcohol) onto the surface of polyaniline-modified electrodes. The biosensor modified with the designed zwitterionic peptide showed the highest specificity amongst four kinds of biosensors.

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