Organic Bioelectronic Devices for Selective Biomarker Sensing : Towards Integration with Living Systems

Abstract: Inorganic materials have been the main players of the semiconductor industry for the past forty years. However, there has been a continuous interest and growth in the research and in the application of organic semiconductors (OSCs) as active materials in electronic devices, due to the possibility to process these materials at low temperature on flexible substrates, fabricate them on large-area, and upscale their fabrication using cost-effective strategies such as printing. Because of these features, organic electronic devices are rapidly emerging as biosensors for biomarkers, with a high potential for becoming a high-throughput tool even deployable at the point-of-care.  One of the most used and studied platforms is the organic electrochemical transistor (OECT). OECTs have been largely used as biosensors in order to transduce and amplify electrical signals or detect biological analytes upon proper functionalization with specific biorecognition units. OECTs can operate at low voltages, are easy to fabricate on different substrates, and are compatible with the aqueous environment, and can therefore be interfaced with living systems, ranging from mammals to plants. The OECT device configuration includes a gate electrode that modulates the current in the channel through an electrolyte, which can be not only a buffered solution but even a complex biological fluid. When OECTs are operated as biosensors, the sensing mechanism relies on the current variation generated from specific reactions with the analyte of interest. These devices are paving the way to the development of point-of-care technologies and portable biosensors with fast and label-free detection. Moreover, OECTs can help to reveal new biological insight and allow a better understanding of physiological processes. During my PhD, I focused on design, fabrication, and validation of different OECT-based biosensors for the detection of biomarkers that are relevant for healthcare applications, thus showing their high potential as a proper sensing platform. We developed sensors towards different analytes, ranging from small molecules to proteins, with ad hoc designed materials strategies to endow the device with selectivity towards the species of interest. Most notably, I also demonstrated the possibility of integrating OECTs in plants, as an example of interfacing these biosensors with living systems. In the first two papers, we developed screen printed OECTs, presenting PEDOT:PSS as the semiconducting material on the channel. In the first case, the device also featured a PEDOT:PSS gate electrode which was further functionalized with biocompatible gelatin and the enzyme urease to ensure selectivity toward the analyte of interest, namely urea. The biosensor was able to monitor increasing urea concentrations with a limit of detection of 1 µM. In the second paper the screen-printed carbon gate electrode was first modified with platinum and then we ensured selectivity towards the analyte uric acid, a relevant biomarker for wound infection, by entrapping urate oxidase in a dual-ionic-layer hydrogel membrane to filter out charged interfering agents. The biosensor exhibited a 4.5 µM limit of detection and selectivity even in artificial wound exudate. In the third paper we designed an interleukin-6 (IL6) OECT based biosensor able to detect the cytokine down to the pM regime in PBS buffer. The mechanism of detection relied on the specific binding between an aptamer, used as sensing unit on the gate electrode, and the IL6 in solution, allowing for detection ranging from physiological to pathological levels. In the last two papers we developed OECT based biosensors to be interfaced with the plant world. In the fourth paper we presented a glucose sensor, based on the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx) to detect glucose export from chloroplasts. In particular, we demonstrated real-time glucose monitoring with temporal resolution of 1 minute in complex media. In the fifth paper, we developed implantable OECT-based sugar sensors for in vivo real-time monitoring of sugar transport in poplar trees. The biosensors presented a multienzyme-functionalized gate endowing the device with specificity towards glucose and sucrose. Most notably, the OECT sensors did not cause a significant wound response in the plant, allowing us to demonstrate that OECT-based sensors are attractive tools for studying transport kinetics in plants, in vivo and real-time.

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