Frontiers in Chemistry (Mar 2022)

Microfluidic Chip for the Electrochemical Detection of MicroRNAs: Methylene Blue Increasing the Specificity of the Biosensor

  • Claire Poujouly,
  • Jérémy Le Gall,
  • Martina Freisa,
  • Djamila Kechkeche,
  • David Bouville,
  • Jihed Khemir,
  • Pedro Gonzalez-Losada,
  • Jean Gamby

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fchem.2022.868909
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

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MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are biomarkers involved in biological processes that are released by cells and found in biological fluids such as blood. The development of nucleic acid-based biosensors has significantly increased in the past 10 years because the detection of such nucleic acids can easily be applied in the field of early diagnosis. These biosensors need to be sensitive, specific, and fast in order to be effective. This work introduces a newly-built electrochemical biosensor that enables a fast detection in 30 min and, as a result of its integration in microfluidics, presents a limit of detection as low as 1 aM. The litterature concerning the specificity of electrochemical biosensors includes several studies that report one base-mismatch, with the base-mismatch located in the middle of the strand. We report an electrochemical nucleic acid biosensor integrated into a microfluidic chip, allowing for a one-base-mismatch specificity independently from the location of the mismatch in the strand. This specificity was improved using a solution of methylene blue, making it possible to discriminate a partial hybridization from a complete and complementary hybridization.

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