4.8 Article

A Chemically Synthesized Capture Agent Enables the Selective, Sensitive, and Robust Electrochemical Detection of Anthrax Protective Antigen

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 7, Issue 10, Pages 9452-9460

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn404296k

Keywords

pathogens; biosensing; electrochemistry; nanomaterial; ELISA; anthrax; protein capture agents

Funding

  1. U.S. Army Research Office, Institute for Collaborative Biotechnologies [W911NF-09-0001]
  2. U.S. Army Research Laboratory
  3. National Research Foundation of Korea, Korean Government (MEST) [2011-0028861]
  4. Institute of Medical System Engineering (iMSE) of GIST, Republic of Korea

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We report on a robust and sensitive approach for detecting protective antigen (PA) exotoxin from Bacillus anthracis in complex media. A peptide-based capture agent against PA was developed by improving a bacteria display-developed peptide into a highly selective biligand through in situ click screening against a large, chemically synthesized peptide library. This biligand was coupled with an electrochemical enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay utilizing nanostructured gold electrodes. The resultant assay yielded a limit of detection of PA of 170 pg/mL. (2.1 pM) in buffer, with minimal sensitivity reduction in 1% serum. The powdered capture agent could be stably stored for several days at 65 degrees C, and the full electrochemical biosensor showed no loss of performance after extended storage at 40 degrees C. The engineered stability and specificity of this assay should be extendable to other cases in which biomolecular detection in demanding environments is required.

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