Herein, a novel electrochemical biosensor for sensitive analysis of prostate specific antigen (PSA) is demonstrated. A specific peptide is employed on the gold electrode as a molecular recognition element for… Click to show full abstract
Herein, a novel electrochemical biosensor for sensitive analysis of prostate specific antigen (PSA) is demonstrated. A specific peptide is employed on the gold electrode as a molecular recognition element for target induced cleavage. In the absence of PSA, graphene oxide (GO) is directly immobilized on the peptide modified electrode, which triggers the aggregation of silver ions and subsequent reduction reaction to form silver nanoparticles (AgNPs). Well defined sharp silver stripping peak can thus be achieved, which stands for a highly characteristic solid-state Ag/AgCl reaction. However, in the presence of PSA, the peptide is specifically recognized and cleaved. The resulted product on the electrode surface cannot aid the immobilization of GO and subsequent formation of AgNPs. Therefore, electrochemical response is decreased remarkably, which can be used to indicate the concentration of PSA. This work demonstrates that the combination of the transduction of peptide cleavage event with GO/AgNPs nanocomposites is a promising attempt for PSA analysis with high sensitivity and selectivity.
               
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