Sensors (Sep 2019)

DNA Biosensor Based on Double-Layer Discharge for the Detection of HPV Type 16

  • José R. Espinosa,
  • Marisol Galván,
  • Arturo S. Quiñones,
  • Jorge L. Ayala,
  • Sergio M. Durón

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/s19183956
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 18
p. 3956

Abstract

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DNA electrochemical biosensors represent a feasible alternative for the diagnosis of different pathologies. In this work, the development of an electrochemical method for Human Papillomavirus-16 (HPV-16) sensing is reported based on potential relaxation measurements related to the discharge of a complex double layer of a DNA-modified gold electrode. The method used allows us to propose an equivalent circuit (EC) for a DNA/Au electrode, which was corroborated by electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) measurement. This model differs from the Randles circuit that is commonly used in double-layer simulations. The change in the potential relaxation and associated charge transfer resistance were used for sensing the DNA hybridization by using the redox pair Fe(CN)64-/Fe(CN)63+ as an electrochemical indicator. In order to determinate only the potential relaxation of the composed double layer, the faradic and double-layer current contributions were separated using a rectifier diode arrangement. A detection limit of 0.38 nM was obtained for the target HPV-16 DNA sequences. The biosensor showed a qualitative discrimination between a single-base mismatched sequence and the fully complementary HPV-16 DNA target. The results indicate that the discharge of the double-layer detection method can be used to develop an HPV DNA biosensor.

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