JOURNAL ARTICLE

Conductive carbon black

Year: 1994 Journal:   Additives for Polymers Vol: 1994 (12)Pages: 7-7   Publisher: Elsevier BV

Abstract

A novel electrochemical sensing assay for sensitive determination of HIV-1 in a homogeneous solution has been developed using an electrochemical molecular beacon combined with a nafion–graphene composite film modified screen-printed carbon electrode (nafion–graphene/SPCE). The electrochemical molecular beacon (CAs-MB), comprising a special recognition sequence for the conserved region of the HIV-1 gag gene and a pair of carminic acid molecules as a marker, can indicate the presence of the HIV-1 target by its on/off electrochemical signal behavior. It is suitable for direct, electrochemical determination of HIV-1, thereby simplifying the detection procedure and improving the signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio. To further improve the sensitivity, the nafion–graphene/SPCE was used to monitor changes in the CAs-MB, which has notable advantages, such as being ultrasensitive, inexpensive, and disposable. Under optimized conditions, the peak currents showed a linear relationship with the logarithm of target oligonucleotide concentrations ranging from 40 nM to 2.56 μM, with a detection limit of 5 nM (S/N=3). This sensing assay also displays a good stability, with a recovery of 88–106.8% and RSD<7% (n=5) in real serum samples. This work may lead to the development of an effective method for early point-of-care diagnosis of HIV-1 infection.

Keywords:
Graphene Nafion Detection limit Electrochemistry Electrode Materials science Molecular beacon Carbon black Oligonucleotide Nanotechnology Chemistry Chromatography Gene Biochemistry

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Citation History

Topics

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
HIV Research and Treatment
Life Sciences →  Immunology and Microbiology →  Virology
HIV/AIDS drug development and treatment
Health Sciences →  Medicine →  Infectious Diseases

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