The present invention relates the detection of targets and, in particular although not exclusively, to the label-free detection of proteins and other target molecules.
A conventional approach to detecting certain target molecules, for example a specific protein, is to functionalize a support surface with probe molecules, for example antibodies specific to the protein in question. A sample to be tested for the presence of the specific protein is applied to the surface, which is then washed to remove any of the sample which has not bonded to the probe molecule attached to the surface. Any of the specific target molecules which have bonded to the probe will remain on the surface and are detected using, for example, fluorescent labels or makers which have previously been attached to the protein in question. Significantly, this conventional technique requires a label of some kind to be attached to the protein in question such that its presence can be detected.
The importance of label-free protein detection has been recognized in the biological sciences because of its importance for medical and biological applications, not least because it dispenses with the need to label target protein.
In recent years a number of techniques have been proposed and investigated, such as functionalized silicon nano-wires or carbon nano-tubes. Currently commercial implementations utilize methods such as micro-arrays and surface plasmon resonance.
Among the nano-structure based techniques, many require expensive equipment or expensive fabrication techniques, e.g. electron beam lithography, or methods currently inefficient for mass production such as harvesting and individual positioning of randomly grown nano-wires to form transistor structures. Therefore, there exists a need for an inexpensive detection scheme that can be widely used for a range of chemicals and molecules such as proteins, DNA, RNA and small viral particles or bacteria.
In a first aspect of the invention there is provided an electrode structure for use in detecting a target binding to a probe immobilized on the electrode structure, as claimed in claim 1. In some embodiments, the structure includes an electrode layer secured to a perforated insulating layer supporting probe molecules lining the inside of the perforations in the insulating layer. Advantageously, the probe is disposed on the insulating layer in relation to a hole in the insulating layer such that the effective cross-section of the hole (and hence the effective exposed electrode area) changes on binding of a target to the probe. This allows the binding to be detected by the corresponding change in the cross-section of the hole, which can be detected by a change in a current flowing in an electrolyte through the hole. Further, this arrangement provides a compact and efficient configuration which is easy to manufacture.
Advantageously, the probe may include probe molecules, such as an antibody, single stranded DNA or single stranded RNA and the probe may be supported by the member on the surface within the hole. The probe may be any chemical or material specifically binding to a respective target chemical or material to be detected.
The holes may have a diameter in the range of 100 to 2000 nm, for example 300 nm and may have a depth in the range of 5 nm to 500 nm, for example 50 nm. The holes may cover a fractional area of the member in the range of about 0.05 to about 0.6, for example 0.2. The holes may, for example, be nano holes or pores (having a diameter of about 100 nm or less), sub-micron holes or pores (having a diameter between about 100 nm and about one micrometer) or micro pores or holes having a diameter of the order of micrometers.
For example, the porous insulating layer may comprise SiO2. The electrode layer may comprise platinum. Adhesion between the platinum and SiO2 layer may be improved by a Cr layer disposed between the two respective layers. The electrode layer may, at its other face, be secured to an insulator. Advantageously, this helps to prevent or reduce a leakage current passing other than through the probe supporting member. Other means for ensuring that the current between the electrodes passes through the probe supporting members may of course be equally employed.
Advantageously, the probe may include a probe molecule secured to the probe supporting member by a pH dependent bond. This allows the electrode layer to be used to locally change the pH in the region of the probe supporting member, allowing the bond of the probe with the probe supporting member to be broken to re-functionalize the probe supporting member with probe molecules.
In a second aspect of the invention, there is provided a system for detecting a target binding to a probe as disclosed herein and claimed.
The measured quantity may be representative of a projected area of the pore or pores projected onto an electrode or conducting layer. The system is arranged with circuitry for cyclic voltammetry and has a processor arranged to detect a change in, for example, peak current of the cyclic voltammetry as representative of targeted probe binding. Advantageously, the processor may further be arranged to estimate an effective size of a target as a function of the change in peak current, taking account of the average hole diameter of the probe supporting member in this estimation.
In a third aspect of the invention, there is provided a method of detecting the binding of a target to a probe molecule as disclosed herein and claimed.
In a fourth aspect of the invention, there is provided an electrically addressable array as disclosed herein and claimed.
In a fifth aspect of the invention, there is provided a system and method of reading an addressable array as disclosed herein and claimed.
Embodiments of the invention are now described, by way of example only, with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
In overview, an electrical detection technique for label-free detection of proteins or other molecules, such as listed above, is described which may also be used for simultaneous estimation of a major size parameter of the protein in its natural medium, in effect, a caliper for bio molecules. In some embodiments, the fabrication lithography is based on a type of patterning using naturally developed CsCl nano-islands as the resist as described in detail below; a technique which can offer cost-effective nano-pattering of large areas.
Some embodiments include an electrochemical cell having two platinum electrodes in an aqueous electrolyte, one of the electrodes being a planar structure of platinum on silicon, the other platinum electrode being covered with insulating silicon dioxide perforated by pores or holes that have been etched down to the platinum. A wire electrode may be used instead of the planar (unperforated) electrode. Other suitable metals can be used for the electrodes, for example gold.
Any ionic current to the other electrode must pass through the pores, which may expose typically a quarter of the electrode surface area. The pores are functionalized (with “probe” molecules such as antibodies) to bind a particular, “target”molecule (for example a protein). If the pores are made small enough (for example 10-100 times the “diameter” or largest size scale of the protein to be detected), the attachment of the protein to the functionalized pore side-walls leads to a measurable reduction in the exposed platinum electrode area at the bottom of the pore, and hence to a decrease in electrode current providing a signal indicating the presence of the protein. The electrode current is measured using a fast, chemically inert, redox couple (and depends on the IN characteristics of the redox couple); and since the fractional active area of exposed platinum is relatively large (for example ¼) the electrode current-voltage relation is believed to be as for a planar electrode and proportional to the exposed electrode area. The electrode voltage is measured with respect to a reference electrode, for example a saturated calomel electrode. The resulting (electrically measured) decrease in pore diameter associated with the binding of the target is indicative of the presence of the target in the sample may give useful information on the attached target molecule size.
Fabrication of Electrode Assembly
Using self-organized CsCl islands as a means for nano-lithography (see for example: Mino Green, M. Garcia-Parajo, F. Khaleque and R Murray “Quantum pillar structures fabricated on n+ gallium arsenide fabricated using “natural” lithography”, Appl. Phys Lett. 63,264-266 (1993); Mino Green and Shin Tsuchiya, “Mesoscopic Hemisphere Arrays for use as Resist in Solid State Structure Fabrication.” J. Vac. Sci. & Tech. B, 17, 2074-2083 (1999); Shin Tsuchiya, Mino Green and RRA Syms, “Structural Fabrication Using Cesium Chloride Island Arrays as Resist in a Fluorocarbon Reactive Ion Etching Plasma”, Electrochemical and Solid-State Letters, 3, 44-46 (2000), all herewith incorporated herein by reference), a process, in accordance with some embodiments, is now described for the fabrication of platinum (Pt) electrodes covered with a layer of silicon dioxide perforated through to the Pt by pores or holes.
The process is now described with reference to
The resulting electrode structure 1 includes a Pt layer 2 secured to a SiO2/Si substrate 4 by a Cr adhesion layer 6. The Pt layer 2 is in turn covered by a perforated SiO2 layer 8 supported on a Cr adhesion layer 10 and defining pores 9 therein where the CsCl islands were.
a-c, show scanning electron microscopy pictures of example CsCl hemispheres, and the resulting pore structure. Three different humidities (with 1 hour exposure) were used to create exemplary chips with distributions of three different mean diameter pores. The different mean diameters were calculated from the electron micrographs, as 93 nm, 155 nm and 310 nm, for relative humidities of 44%, 55% and 70%, respectively. The fractional pore coverage (i.e. the fractional coverage or packing density of the islands) was in the range of 15-25% for the different chips.
To prepare an electrode assembly or chip 11 for electrochemical experiments, the electrode structure 1 is cleaved into smaller chips (˜7 mm×7 mm size) and provided with connector wires, as is now described with reference to
Electrode Operation
With a view to ensuring reproducibility of electrochemical cyclic voltammetry (cv.) the Fe(CN)63+/4+ redox couple, which is fast enough for the Nernst potential to hold over a substantial voltage range, is used in some embodiments to operate the electrode assembly 11 (For further details on cyclic voltammetry, see e.g. C. H. Hamann, A Hamnett, W. Vielstich, “Electrochemistry”, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim/New York, 1998 pp 222-249, herewith incorporated by reference herein). This redox couple is known to give stable measurements, and is made-up, in some embodiments, in phosphate-buffered saline solution (hereby denoted PBS; an exemplary composition is 8 g/l sodium chloride 0.2 g/l potassium phosphate monobasic, 1.15 g/l sodium phosphate dibasic and 0.2 g/l potassium chloride, resulting in a buffer pH of 7.4) giving 10 mM concentrations of potassium ferricyanide/potassium ferrocyanide (K3[Fe(CN)6]/K4 [Fe(CN)6].3H2O). It is understood that the electrode material may be selected such that the chosen redox reaction is fast, for example platinum or gold is chosen in some embodiments.
To achieve a small, but reproducible, amount of stirring of the electrolyte solution, two 3 mm diameter silicone tubes 26 connected to a peristaltic pump 28 are immersed in the solution. The amount of stirring is selected to give reproducible conditions for the cv curves. For example, a suitable flow rate for the stirring is 2 ml/min in some embodiments and the total electrolyte volume, including the electrolyte in the pump and tubing, is 6 ml.
A computer controlled PG580 potentiostat/galvanostat connected to the electrodes is used to perform the cv. measurements. A scan (scan rate, 0.1 V/sec; voltage range −0.1 to 0.5V vs. a standard calomel electrode. 400 cycles were acquired with 12 s cycle time for a total time of 80 minutes) of an unfunctionalized electrode assembly 11 (mean pore diameter 93 nm) is shown in
Electrode Functionalization
In what follows, electrode functionalization in accordance with some embodiments is described with reference to the biotin-streptavidin interaction as a model target/probe system, using biotin (B) with a chain and linker (NHS-PEG12-biotin, from Perbio Biotech UK Ltd.) for attachment to a chemically activated SiO2 surface. PEG is a 12 unit polyethylene glycol chain (5.6 nm in length) attached to an N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS) linker molecule. Functionalization of the electrode assembly 11 is now described with reference to
It has been established that surface biotin saturation occurs when there is roughly 60 times more biotin in the solution than that required to make a monolayer in order to obtain a suitable near optimum sub-monolayer coverage (see Mino Green, Feng-Ming Liu, Lesley Cohen, Peter Köllensperger and Tony Cass, “SERS Platforms for High Density DNA Arrays”, Faraday Discussions, 132, 269-280 (2005), herewith incorporated by reference herein). On the present patterned electrode chip, biotin (and later streptavidin) binds both to the outer SiO2 surface and also to the inside of the pores 9. If the pores 9 are of sufficiently small diameter, the attachment of the streptavidin should cause an appreciable change in pore diameter, illustrated in
Every probe/target system has a corresponding desired probe fractional coverage at which, when fully interacted with target molecules, a mono-layer of probe—target molecules is achieved. The desired molecular density (number of molecules per square centimetre) of probe molecules will thus vary, for example it is 4×1013/sq.cm for single strand DNA probes and 2×1013/sq. cm for biotin probe to target streptavidin target. As the size of the target molecule increases so the desired surface density of probe molecules decreases.
To functionalize the electrode chip it is cleaned using an oxygen plasma (O2 flow 60 cm2/s, 200 W, 50 mTorr base pressure, 20 s duration). The chip is then modified by immersing it in a 2% solution of APTES in dry acetone for one minute at room temperature. The modified chip is then rinsed, first in acetone and then in PBS solution. The chip is stored in PBS solution until biotin/chain functionalization. Just prior to use, the dry probe molecule material is made up in PBS solution to 5 μM and applied, for example in droplets, onto the front face (SiO2 layer 8, exposed Pt layer 2) of the nano-chip (20 μl quantity for a 7 mm×7 mm size chip). A suitable range of concentrations for biotin is 2 to 5 μM. During functionalization (for example for 1.5 h) the chips are kept at room temperature in a closed container in a humid atmosphere (to prevent or reduce evaporation). After the biotin functionalization each chip is rinsed three times in 2 ml PBS solution in which it is then stored.
A fluorescence microscopy study of chips with micron-sized pores indicates that unfunctionalized chips do not bind streptavidin to a significant extent if the concentration is maintained at a low enough level, for example 33 nM, and further that the platinum electrode surface at the bottom of the biotin-functionalized pores 9 binds streptavidin to a significantly lower extent than the silicon dioxide surface 8 of the chip.
It will be understood that the functionalization protocol, parameters and chemicals used will depend on the specific probe molecule or molecules used and known protocols can be used or new ones established using trial and error. One such parameter is the probe molecule concentration required for a given surface coverage of the functionalization surface.
In some embodiments, the chip could be functionalized with a compound of molecules such as biotin bonded to the treated SiO2 surface 8, streptavidin bonded to the biotin and a biotinylated antibody or other probe bonded to the streptavidin. Advantageously, this allows the chip to be re-functionalized by breaking the streptavidin bond using a local, pH change electrochemically induced by the chip electrode itself, washing and then applying a different streptavidin/probe combination. Other probe/target systems are described in P. Cutler. Proteomics, vol 3, 2003, 2-18 or Zhu et al, Current Opinion in Chemical Biology, vol 5, 2001, 40-45, both incorporated herewith by reference.
Yet a further probe molecule could be single stranded DNA molecules. On hybridization with its complementary molecule, the resulting double-stranded DNA curls up into a double-helix, thereby increasing, rather than decreasing the pore diameter on probe to target binding.
Detection of Probe—Target Binding
In one specific example for the detection of SA binding, biotin-functionalized electrode assemblies or chips 11 are immersed in the ferri-ferrocyanide PBS electrolyte. The cv. measurement, with circulation of the electrolyte as described above, is started and allowed to run for 10-15 minutes. This stabilization treatment may be advantageous in order to remove probe molecules weakly attached to the exposed surface of the Pt layer 2. Then, for example, 10 μl of 330 nM streptavidin solution is added to the electrolyte yielding a target molecule concentration of 0.55 nM To minimize the disturbance due to target molecule insertion the same ferro-ferricyanide-/PBS composition is maintained during addition. The cv. measurement is then run (for example for as much as two hours or much less). Cv. scan intervals can be set −0.1 to 0.5 V (vs SCE) at a scan rate of 0.1 V/s. It will be understood that these protocols will be readily adapted as appropriate for the probe/target systems in question.
For data analysis the maximum oxidisation current values 30 (illustrated in
After initial stabilization (indicated by A in
Size-estimation
The response to SA from functionalized chips with three different mean nano-pore diameters can be investigated to demonstrate size-estimation.
The chips have distribution of nano-pore diameters but it can be shown that upon the attachment of a thin layer on the nano-pore wall, the reduction in total area of the ensemble of nano-pores having a size-distribution is very similar to the area reduction of an ensemble of pores all being of the mean diameter (in effect the larger response from the smaller pores is cancelled by the smaller response of the larger pores). Since the area reduction of the pores on a chip when the streptavidin binds to the inside of the pore walls should cause a proportional reduction to the cv. peak current of the chip the relative reduction in current for the three different functionalized chips when streptavidin solution is added to the electrolyte can be compared to the calculated area reduction for nano-pores of different size when a thin layer is added to the inside of the pore wall.
For the analysis of experimental data, the initial pore diameter is taken as the mean diameter extracted from the SEM images of the fabricated chips, minus twice the chain length of the biotin spacer arm (2×5.6 nm) As can be seen from
It is possible that streptavidin may not form a complete monolayer and thus only partially block the ion flow through the pore close to the nano-pore walls. However, even if the layer is not complete, an ion flowing down into the pore will be likely to be obstructed by at least one streptavidin molecule, since the depth of the pore (40 nm) allows for at least 7 streptavidin molecules in the vertical direction. Indeed, the fact the magnitude of the experimental response fits well with what is expected from geometrical considerations assuming that the streptavidin forms a monolayer, is itself an indication that a sufficiently dense layer of streptavidin has formed on the pore walls.
These results suggest a technique for size estimation of a molecule. The pores 9 in the SiO2 layer 8 have an average diameter of <d> and a total fractional area surface coverage of F, characterizing the chip 11. The functionalization of the pores 9 with probe molecules reduces the mean diameter to <d−p>=<do>, and target/probe interaction reduces the value of <do> to <do−t>=<d1>, where p and t are twice the size of probe molecule and target molecule respectively. The average area reduction is related to the square of the average diameters. Reduction in area means a corresponding reduction in conductance (which is inversely related to resistance). Reducing the value of <do> (the pores with probe molecules) to <d1> reduces the electrical conductance of the chip, i.e. increases the electrical resistance of the pixel, in the ratio (<do>/<d1>)2=R1/Ro. The size of the target molecule can thus be estimated from a knowledge of <d0> and the relative increase in resistance of the cell (or, equivalently, the relative decrease in peak oxidisation current during c.v).
The following theoretical considerations are believed to underline this measurement. The electrolyte contains a redox couple e.g. potassium ferricyanide and potassium ferrocyanide (Fe3+/Fe4+), the potential of the electrode is thought to be determined by the ratio of Fe3+/Fe4+, i.e. it behaves in a Nernstian manner. When the voltage is applied as a linear sweep between the electrodes a current passes: the composition of Fe3+/Fe4+ in front of the electrode follows the Nernst equation [E=E°+(RT/nF)(scox/scred)] and the maximum oxidisation current (see
It should be noted that <d> and p and t are characteristic of a given chip and probe/target system which can be measured (for example using image processing of an electron micrograph) or estimated, for example from knowledge of the pore distribution and probe molecule geometry.
With reference to
To perform label-free detection, an electrochemical cell including an electrode assembly 11 as described above, functionalized with a probe specific to the target to be detected in the sample is connected to the driving and measurement circuitry and an initial settling in a calibration phase is carried out in some embodiments, if required, as described above for the maximum current to reach a stable level. Entire electrochemical cells comprising a suitably functionalized electrode assembly may be manufactured and provided as one unit or the electrochemical cell may include a connector for connecting a suitably functionalized electrode assembly to driving and measurement circuitry 42, the remaining components of the electrochemical cell forming part of the system. Similarly, the electrode assembly 11 may be pretreated so that no settling in/calibration stage is required.
Following the addition of a sample to the electrochemical cell (either manually or through a suitable automated device such as a pipette robot or a microfluidic device), the current signal is monitored and a change (increase or decrease as the case may be) in the maximum current is detected as representative of the presence of the target.
Optionally, in some embodiments, the magnitude of the change of the maximum current can be analyzed to estimate a size parameter of the target as described above and displayed on the output device 48 or stored or outputted in any other suitable way. The output device 48 may further or alternatively include one or more data storage devices for storing parameters of the system and both raw and analyzed data pertaining to the target detection.
It will be understood that the above description of some embodiments is of specific examples only and not intended to be limiting on the scope of the invention as claimed in the apendent claims. Many alterations, modifications and juxtapositions of the features described above will be apparent to the skilled person and these are intended to be covered.
In particular, it will be understood that the above-described methods, techniques and systems can be used with targets and probes other than the ones described above. Equally, other fabrication processes for manufacturing a probe support as described above can be used, for example ion beam lithography. Similarly, the materials used in the manufacture of the electrode assembly described above can be interchanged for suitable other materials, for example metals other than platinum may be used for the electrodes or insulators other than SiO2 may be used as insulators.
Any suitable electrochemical cell may be used in conjunction with the above-described system, and in particular, these are not limited to the reference or counter-electrode described above but rather other materials, shapes and configurations may be used. For example, the counter-electrode may be directly applied to the surface of the SiO2 surface 8 or, on the other hand, the probe support member may be provided separately from both the working and counter-electrode electrically in between these two as long as the current between the two electrodes is arranged to pass through the hole or pores of the support member.
Other techniques for driving the electrochemical cell and measuring a signal representative of target to probe binding may be used, for example, chronopotentiomentry may be used instead of cyclic voltammetry, and similarly, other characteristics of the measured signals can be used, for example the minimum reducing current or another well-defined point of the measured signal. Similarly, voltage rather than current may be measured.
Electrode Arrays
In some embodiments, strip electrodes similar to the electrodes structure described above are arranged in an electrically addressable array to allow the detection of a potentially large number of target materials. It will be understood that the same considerations regarding the geometry of the electrode structure and its functionalization as for the embodiments described above apply with some additional considerations as set out below.
With reference to
The pores in the insulating layer 56 are typically 250-350 microns in diameter and disposed in a uniform density but disordered or random array. Typically, the pores have a total area summing to 20% of the area of the electrodes. Naturally, it will be understood that all electrode structures described above can be made in an elongate shape and equally used with the addressable array. The average pore diameter may be varied over the extent of the electrode such that different intersections or pixels of the array (see below) have different respective average diameters to accommodate probes of differing diameters.
A gasket 62 is disposed between the row and column electrodes to define a volume therebetween for containing an electrolyte. The gasket is preferably made of an inert material so as not to interfere with the operation of the array. One of the substrates 54 and 60, for example the upper one, is provided with one or more, for example two, fluidic access ports allowing electrolyte to be circulated through the volume defined by the gasket and/or chemicals such as target materials to be added to the volume.
The row and column electrodes are disposed relative to each other such that they intersect, typically at right angles, to define overlapping regions where one row electrode overlaps a column electrode and vice versa. To address specifically such an overlapping region, the corresponding row and column electrodes (for example C1 and R2 for overlapping region 66) can be addressed by connecting the corresponding electrodes to a voltage source and current sensor to drive and measure an ionic current through the corresponding overlapping region, as for the electrode structure of the first embodiment. As the detection signal is a relative signal detecting a drop in current (see below), no reference electrode is required.
With reference to
The contacts 74 for connecting to column electrodes are connected to transimpedance amplifiers 88 (or any other suitable current to voltage converter), which are connected to an analogue to digital converter (ADC) 90 by a multiplexer 92. The multiplexer 92 is under control of the micro controller 89 via a column address latch 94 and the ADC 90 produces a digital signal representative of the current at the input of the transimpedance amplifiers 88, which is supplied to the micro controller 89 via databus 86 for current measurement. The micro controller is further connected to a user interface, storage device and other peripherals for reading out the array as described below.
Array Functionalization
The intersecting areas or overlapping regions of the electrodes where the electrodes overlap will be referred to here as “pixels”. The same considerations apply regarding functionalization of the electrodes structure of the pixels as for the single cell of the first embodiment described above. The inner wall of the pores in a particular pixel are coated with a layer (usually less dense than a packed monolayer) of “probe” material which is selected to be a specific probe for a specific target material. This specific probe material over a particular pixel is referred to as “functionalization”. The probe material is attached to the pixel walls via suitable chemistry so that the probe is not liable to desorb from the walls, before, during, or after exposure to electrolyte and test material. The object of the functionalization is to capture the target material (in the sample) to which it is chemically specific, adding it to the thickness of the probe material, thereby reducing the effective diameter of the well. A reduction in the effective diameter of the well results in an increase in the electrical resistance of the column of electrolyte in the well for purely geometrical reasons. An example is the biotin (probe)/streptavidin (target) pair. Probe arrays of a very wide range of chemicals for a wide selection of target materials are envisaged (see e.g. P. Cutler. Proteomics, vol 3, 2003, 2-18 or Zhu et al, Current Opinion in Chemical Biology, vol 5, 2001, 40-45, both herewith incorporated herein by reference). The requirements apart from specificity are, chemical stability, and a resulting dimensional change of effective well diameter that can be measured. Typically the change in diameter should be more than 5%, preferably 20-30%, but not so much as to fill the entire well. Based on these considerations, parameters of the electrode structure, such as average well diameter, and functionalisation, such as probe concentration, can readily be tuned for a given application.
In order to functionalize individual pixels, the following protocol can be adopted. First, a probe material forming pH sensitive bonds with the porous insulating layer 56 is applied to the array such that all overlapping regions are functionalized with this probe material. Then, a voltage is applied to electrode pairs corresponding to all but the pixel or pixels which are to be functionalized with this probe material to break the pH dependent bonds, followed by the area being rinsed to remove any unbound probe material. This leaves only the desired pixels functionalized with this first probe material. Subsequently a second probe material is applied to the array which will functionalize all pixels other than the ones already functionalized (due to competition for binding space). Once the remaining pixels have been functionalized in this way, the pH of those pixels which are not to be functionalized with either the first and second probe material are activated to change the local pH such that the bonds of the second probe material at pixels not to be functionalized by the first and second probe material is broken. After the array has been suitably rinsed, the procedure can again be repeated for a third and subsequent probe material until all pixels or groups of pixels have been functionalized with a corresponding probe material. An example of a suitable probe material is a biotin/streptavidin compound for binding to the insulating substrate with suitable target specific molecules such as antibodies bound to the streptavidin.
Array Electrical Measurement
As for the first embodiment an equi-molar (0.01M) solution of potassium ferricyanide [K3(Fe(CN)6] and potassium ferrocyanide [K4(Fe(CN)6] in supporting electrolyte of phosphate buffered saline solution (pH 7.4; 0.01M phosphate) is used in some embodiments. With stationary fluid an electrical property, such as resistance, of each pixel is measured and recorded as a reference scan. The reference scan may include an initial stabilization period as described above. The target material is then added to the electrolyte; the material is circulated over the array of probes for a sufficient time (typically a few minutes) for specific attachment to take place. The fluid flow is stopped and the array is now re-measured as a target scan.
The pixel where the probe-target interaction has taken place is revealed by an increase in the resistance of that particular pixel from the reference to target scan, as for the first embodiment. The electrical resistance is measured using cyclic voltammetry as above, which is the application of a linear time ramp in applied cell voltage across a row and a column electrode, giving rise to an associated current (oxidation/reduction of the Fe3+/Fe4+ couple).
In regular cyclic voltammetry, the current peak arises from the fact that the exponential increase of the consumption (see C. H. Hamann, A Hamnett, W. Vielstich, “Electrochemistry”, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim/New York, 1998 pp 222-249, herewith incorporated by reference herein) of the active species at the particular electrode in the cycle during the voltage sweep quickly leads to depletion of the active species near the electrode. The ion flow thus becomes diffusion-limited as the active species now has to diffuse into the pixel volume in the overlapping region between the electrodes from the bulk solution. This process occurs both at the working electrode (WE) and the counter electrode (CE) but with different species of ions (reduced or oxidised). However, if the WE and CE are located closely together (about 100 μm so that the entire electrolyte between the two electrodes is a stationary diffusion layer) the generated species of one ion can directly diffuse over to the other electrode to be collected there and feed the opposite reaction at that electrode. This is the basis for the generation-collection device concept (T. R. L. C. Paixão, E. M. Richter, J. G. A. Brito-Neto and M. Bertotti “Fabrication of a new generator-collector electrochemical micro-device: Characterization and applications”, Electrochem. Commun. 8 (2006) 9-14; L. B. Anderson, C. N. Reilley, “Thin-layer electrochemistry: Use of twin working electrodes for the study of chemical kinetics”, J. Electroanal. Chem. 10 (1965) 538; L. B. Anderson, B. McDuffie, C. N. Reilley, “Diagnostic criteria for the study of chemical and physical processes by twin-electrode thin-layer electrochemistry”, J. Electroanal. Chem. 12 (1966) 477; S. J. Konopka, B. McDuffie, “Diffusion coefficients of ferri- and ferrocyanide ions in aqueous media, using twin-electrode thin-layer electrochemistry”, Anal. Chem. 42 (1970) 1741, all herewith incorporated by reference herein), and instead of a voltammogram peak, this gives rise to an S-shaped voltammogram, since for large potentials across the electrodes, the reaction at each electrode is virtually instantaneous, and the current is only limited by the time it takes for a particular ion species to diffuse across the electrode gap.
Thus the current will increase with increasing potential until it reaches a constant level (total diffusion control) which will be maintained at higher potentials. This steady-state diffusion situation prevails with a linear concentration gradient [T. R. L. C. Paixão, E. M. Richter, J. G. A. Brito-Neto and M. Bertotti “Fabrication of a new generator-collector electrochemical micro-device: Characterization and applications”, Electrochem. Commun. 8 (2006) 9-14) and in a similar manner to the regular cyclic voltammetry peak current (C. H. Hamann, A Hamnett, W. Vielstich, “Electrochemistry”, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim/New York, 1998 pp 222-249). The maximum current is proportional to the projected electrode area (S. J. Konopka, B. McDuffie, “Diffusion coefficients of ferri- and ferrocyanide ions in aqueous media, using twin-electrode thin-layer electrochemistry”, Anal. Chem. 42 (1970) 1741.).
If now a single intersection of the sets of electrodes is considered, the situation is slightly different, since there is both a portion in the intersection where the electrodes are located closely in the overlapping region and portions of the electrodes that are located far from each other elsewhere. If the potential, E, across these electrodes is now scanned from E=0 V, there will initially be a current contribution from all areas of the electrodes since there are ions of both species (reduced or oxidised) present at each electrode. At a certain point, the diffusion limit will be achieved, and there will be a peak in the voltammogram, similar to regular cyclic voltammetry. However, if the scan is continued, as E increases, the electrolyte not in the electrode intersection will be depleted, of the needed species or the needed species is excluded by ohmic drop (an effect enhanced by the thin layer of electrolyte). During the whole scan, the redox reaction in the electrode intersection is constantly fed by direct diffusion through the electrolyte between the two electrodes. At higher E, this current will dominate, and the measured current response (IR in
As long as the opposed electrodes of a pixel are close enough together to establish an ionic diffusion controlled environment, the pixel operates in the generation-recombination mode of cyclic voltammetry. This configuration and mode of operation prevents the formation of spurious electrical paths via other electrodes at levels of E where the current substantially saturates. Using this saturated current as a measure keeps the current measurement substantially exclusive to the particular pixel.
Thus, at higher voltages the current saturates, (IR), and is characteristic of the pixel resistance, i.e. a flattened S-shaped curve is obtained: see
Array Readout
The array can be addressed a-pixel-at-a-time by connecting the rows to the columns in sequence while the unconnected lines are floating. Thus the row shift register 78 might connect row R2 (that means rows R1, R3 etc are floating) to column C3 via the column shift register 92 (that means columns C1, C2 etc are floating). In this case pixel [R2, C3] is connected while all other lines are floating. Here the measurement time per pixel is the cycle time. Typical cv cycle time is 5-30 seconds.
An array can also be addressed a row-at-a-time for more rapid read-out. Here a row is connected and voltage is ramped up in accordance with V(t) and then held at V(max) giving a cycle times of T. While the row and all its intersecting columns are at V(max) the current in each column is measured, giving the individual pixel currents. The total measurement time per pixel is the time to measure the individual column current, typically <1 second plus the cycle time divided by the number of pixels per row. The total time per row with N columns is then current measurement time, Nt (e.g. t=0.1 sec), plus cycle time T (e.g. 10 sec). This gives [Nt+T] sec. per line i.e. [Nt+T]/N seconds per pixel. So a 20×20 array might take 240 seconds for a single scan or about 480 seconds for both the reference and target scan, that is about 8 minutes.
Exemplary use of an Array
In some embodiments, a fully functionalized electrode array is provided complete with electrolyte and an external pump line in an antiseptic package. For use, the package is opened and clipped into a small electronic device having a mechanical holder for holding the package and making contact with the array as set out above. The device includes the circuitry described with reference to
In some embodiments, the antiseptic package and electrode array may be disposable after each use or, in others, the electrode array may be reusable after suitable washing of the array.
It will be understood that the above description of specific embodiments of the invention is by way of example only and not intended to limit the scope of the invention as claimed in the appendent independent claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0801142.1 | Jan 2008 | GB | national |
This divisional patent application claims priority to and the benefit of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 12/863,900 (371(c) filing date Jul. 21, 2010, international filing date Jan. 21, 2009), which is a U.S. national phase application of PCT Application No. PCT/GB2009/000161 filed Jan. 21, 2009, which claims the priority of Great Britain patent application number GB 0801142.1 filed Jan. 22, 2008, which are all incorporated herein by reference in their entirety.
Number | Date | Country | |
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Parent | 12863900 | Jul 2010 | US |
Child | 13924503 | US |