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Convergence of dip-pen nanolithography and acoustic biosensors towards a rapid-analysis multi-sample microsystem.
Analyst. 2012 Jul 07; 137(13):3076-82.A

Abstract

The present work demonstrates for the first time patterning of a ready-to-use biosensor with several different biomolecules using Dip-Pen Nanolithography (DPN) for the development of a procedure towards more rapid and efficient multi-sample detection. The biosensor platform used is based on a Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) device integrated with a parallel-channel microfluidic module, termed as "microfluidics-on-SAW" ("μF-on-SAW"), for reproducible multi-sample analysis. Lipids with different functionalized head groups were patterned at distinct, microfluidic-formed rectangular domains with sharp edges all located on the same sensor surface; pattern quality was verified using a fluorescent microscope. The functionality of the head groups, the efficiency of the patterning method, and the suitability of DPN for the surface modification of the acoustic device were subsequently examined through acoustic experiments. The μF-on-SAW configuration was used to detect specific binding between the pre-patterned functionalized lipids with their corresponding biomolecules. The achievement of an improved sensitivity (5-fold compared to previous acoustic configurations) and reduced preparation time by at least 2 h clearly indicates the suitability of DPN as a direct patterning method for ready-to-use acoustic sensor devices like the μF-on-SAW towards integrated, rapid-analysis, multi-sample biosensing microsystem development.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Institute of Molecular Biology & Biotechnology, Foundation for Research & Technology Hellas, Heraklion, Crete, Greece. kmits@imbb.forth.grNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info availableNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

22627738

Citation

Mitsakakis, Konstantinos, et al. "Convergence of Dip-pen Nanolithography and Acoustic Biosensors Towards a Rapid-analysis Multi-sample Microsystem." The Analyst, vol. 137, no. 13, 2012, pp. 3076-82.
Mitsakakis K, Sekula-Neuner S, Lenhert S, et al. Convergence of dip-pen nanolithography and acoustic biosensors towards a rapid-analysis multi-sample microsystem. Analyst. 2012;137(13):3076-82.
Mitsakakis, K., Sekula-Neuner, S., Lenhert, S., Fuchs, H., & Gizeli, E. (2012). Convergence of dip-pen nanolithography and acoustic biosensors towards a rapid-analysis multi-sample microsystem. The Analyst, 137(13), 3076-82. https://doi.org/10.1039/c2an35156k
Mitsakakis K, et al. Convergence of Dip-pen Nanolithography and Acoustic Biosensors Towards a Rapid-analysis Multi-sample Microsystem. Analyst. 2012 Jul 7;137(13):3076-82. PubMed PMID: 22627738.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Convergence of dip-pen nanolithography and acoustic biosensors towards a rapid-analysis multi-sample microsystem. AU - Mitsakakis,Konstantinos, AU - Sekula-Neuner,Sylwia, AU - Lenhert,Steven, AU - Fuchs,Harald, AU - Gizeli,Electra, Y1 - 2012/05/25/ PY - 2012/5/26/entrez PY - 2012/5/26/pubmed PY - 2012/10/2/medline SP - 3076 EP - 82 JF - The Analyst JO - Analyst VL - 137 IS - 13 N2 - The present work demonstrates for the first time patterning of a ready-to-use biosensor with several different biomolecules using Dip-Pen Nanolithography (DPN) for the development of a procedure towards more rapid and efficient multi-sample detection. The biosensor platform used is based on a Surface Acoustic Wave (SAW) device integrated with a parallel-channel microfluidic module, termed as "microfluidics-on-SAW" ("μF-on-SAW"), for reproducible multi-sample analysis. Lipids with different functionalized head groups were patterned at distinct, microfluidic-formed rectangular domains with sharp edges all located on the same sensor surface; pattern quality was verified using a fluorescent microscope. The functionality of the head groups, the efficiency of the patterning method, and the suitability of DPN for the surface modification of the acoustic device were subsequently examined through acoustic experiments. The μF-on-SAW configuration was used to detect specific binding between the pre-patterned functionalized lipids with their corresponding biomolecules. The achievement of an improved sensitivity (5-fold compared to previous acoustic configurations) and reduced preparation time by at least 2 h clearly indicates the suitability of DPN as a direct patterning method for ready-to-use acoustic sensor devices like the μF-on-SAW towards integrated, rapid-analysis, multi-sample biosensing microsystem development. SN - 1364-5528 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/22627738/Convergence_of_dip_pen_nanolithography_and_acoustic_biosensors_towards_a_rapid_analysis_multi_sample_microsystem_ L2 - https://doi.org/10.1039/c2an35156k DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -