Issue 1, 2004

Frequency-dependent electrical detection of protein binding events

Abstract

Frequency-dependent electrochemical impedance spectroscopy has been used to characterize the changes in electrical response that accompany specific binding of a protein to its substrate, using the biotin–avidin system as a model. Our results show that avidin, at concentrations in the nanomolar range, can be detected electrically in a completely label-free manner under conditions of zero average current flow and without the use of any auxiliary redox agents. Impedance measurements performed on biotin-modified surfaces of gold, glassy carbon, and silicon were obtained over a wide frequency range, from 5 mHz to 1 MHz. On each biotin-modified surface, binding of avidin is most easily detected at low frequencies, <1 Hz. Electrical circuit modeling of the interface was used to relate the frequency-dependent electrical response to the physical structure of the interface before and after avidin binding. Electrical measurements were correlated with measurements of protein binding using fluorescently labeled avidin.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Jul 2003
Accepted
26 Oct 2003
First published
02 Dec 2003

Analyst, 2004,129, 3-8

Frequency-dependent electrical detection of protein binding events

T. L. Lasseter, W. Cai and R. J. Hamers, Analyst, 2004, 129, 3 DOI: 10.1039/B307591E

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