Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers

<p>The electrochemical quantification of protein biomarkers from complex samples such as human serum promises vast potential for the solution of future healthcare challenges. <strong>Chapter 1</strong> will summarise the current state-of-the art and show that such assays can typica...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fleschhut, FM
Other Authors: Davis, JJ
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2024
Subjects:
_version_ 1811139614947147776
author Fleschhut, FM
author2 Davis, JJ
author_facet Davis, JJ
Fleschhut, FM
author_sort Fleschhut, FM
collection OXFORD
description <p>The electrochemical quantification of protein biomarkers from complex samples such as human serum promises vast potential for the solution of future healthcare challenges. <strong>Chapter 1</strong> will summarise the current state-of-the art and show that such assays can typically be categorized as either sandwich-type or label-free. Label-free methodologies directly transduce a single interfacial recognition event and therefore demand specially designed electrode modifications that come with challenges in stability. While sandwich methodologies offer high sensitivity, they are associated with considerably higher assay complexity as well as time and cost requirements. This work aims to expand the currently available range of methodologies by introducing three distinct approaches focusing on facile implementation as well as simple and stable sensing platforms. <strong>Chapter 3</strong> will introduce the first example of an amperometric dot blot assay for the detection of target protein from diluted serum. The proposed method dismisses any electrode functionalisation and aims to solve practical challenges regarding storage, transport and handling while catering clinical demands for the target proteins. <strong>Chapter 4</strong> aims to explore the use of ensemble redox labelling for the electrochemical quantification of target protein. Hereby, the non-specific redox tagging of all protein in serum in combination with antibody-mediated target recognition at an electrode surface is used to yield a voltametric assay offering facile and multiplexable sensing. <strong>Chapter 5</strong>, finally, elucidates the use of the electroactive protein Azurin as a transducing and anti-fouling building block for the formation of stable biosensory surfaces for target protein immunosensing based on redox-capacitance. A summary of results and an outlook for future work is provided in <strong>Chapter 6</strong>. All experimental details are summarised in <strong>Chapter 2</strong>. Supportive information is provided in the appendix (<strong>Chapter 7</strong>). All referenced work is listed in <strong>Chapter 8</strong>.</p>
first_indexed 2024-09-25T04:08:54Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:672fc46d-8299-49f3-b6eb-ee7cc875e6ac
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-09-25T04:08:54Z
publishDate 2024
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:672fc46d-8299-49f3-b6eb-ee7cc875e6ac2024-06-12T13:05:20ZProtein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkersThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:672fc46d-8299-49f3-b6eb-ee7cc875e6acPhysicsChemistry–physical and theoreticalBiophysicsChemistryEnglishHyrax Deposit2024Fleschhut, FMDavis, JJSharafeldin, M<p>The electrochemical quantification of protein biomarkers from complex samples such as human serum promises vast potential for the solution of future healthcare challenges. <strong>Chapter 1</strong> will summarise the current state-of-the art and show that such assays can typically be categorized as either sandwich-type or label-free. Label-free methodologies directly transduce a single interfacial recognition event and therefore demand specially designed electrode modifications that come with challenges in stability. While sandwich methodologies offer high sensitivity, they are associated with considerably higher assay complexity as well as time and cost requirements. This work aims to expand the currently available range of methodologies by introducing three distinct approaches focusing on facile implementation as well as simple and stable sensing platforms. <strong>Chapter 3</strong> will introduce the first example of an amperometric dot blot assay for the detection of target protein from diluted serum. The proposed method dismisses any electrode functionalisation and aims to solve practical challenges regarding storage, transport and handling while catering clinical demands for the target proteins. <strong>Chapter 4</strong> aims to explore the use of ensemble redox labelling for the electrochemical quantification of target protein. Hereby, the non-specific redox tagging of all protein in serum in combination with antibody-mediated target recognition at an electrode surface is used to yield a voltametric assay offering facile and multiplexable sensing. <strong>Chapter 5</strong>, finally, elucidates the use of the electroactive protein Azurin as a transducing and anti-fouling building block for the formation of stable biosensory surfaces for target protein immunosensing based on redox-capacitance. A summary of results and an outlook for future work is provided in <strong>Chapter 6</strong>. All experimental details are summarised in <strong>Chapter 2</strong>. Supportive information is provided in the appendix (<strong>Chapter 7</strong>). All referenced work is listed in <strong>Chapter 8</strong>.</p>
spellingShingle Physics
Chemistry–physical and theoretical
Biophysics
Chemistry
Fleschhut, FM
Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title_full Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title_fullStr Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title_full_unstemmed Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title_short Protein-film-mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
title_sort protein film mediated strategies for the electrochemical immunosensing of circulating biomarkers
topic Physics
Chemistry–physical and theoretical
Biophysics
Chemistry
work_keys_str_mv AT fleschhutfm proteinfilmmediatedstrategiesfortheelectrochemicalimmunosensingofcirculatingbiomarkers