Abstract

We describe highly sensitive, label-free, multiplexed electrical detection of cancer markers using silicon-nanowire field-effect devices in which distinct nanowires and surface receptors are incorporated into arrays. Protein markers were routinely detected at femtomolar concentrations with high selectivity, and simultaneous incorporation of control nanowires enabled discrimination against false positives. Nanowire arrays allowed highly selective and sensitive multiplexed detection of prostate specific antigen (PSA), PSA-alpha1-antichymotrypsin, carcinoembryonic antigen and mucin-1, including detection to at least 0.9 pg/ml in undiluted serum samples. In addition, nucleic acid receptors enabled real-time assays of the binding, activity and small-molecule inhibition of telomerase using unamplified extracts from as few as ten tumor cells. The capability for multiplexed real-time monitoring of protein markers and telomerase activity with high sensitivity and selectivity in clinically relevant samples opens up substantial possibilities for diagnosis and treatment of cancer and other complex diseases.

Keywords

MultiplexingTelomeraseNucleic acidNanowireReceptorMolecular biologyNanotechnologyMaterials scienceChemistryBiologyCancer researchBiochemistryGeneComputer science

MeSH Terms

BiomarkersTumorBiosensing TechniquesElectric WiringElectrochemistryEquipment DesignEquipment Failure AnalysisHumansImmunoassayMicroelectrodesNanotechnologyNeoplasm ProteinsNeoplasmsProtein Array AnalysisSignal ProcessingComputer-AssistedTelomeraseTransducers

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Publication Info

Year
2005
Type
article
Volume
23
Issue
10
Pages
1294-1301
Citations
2418
Access
Closed

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2418
OpenAlex
32
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2143
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Cite This

Gengfeng Zheng, Fernando Patolsky, Yi Cui et al. (2005). Multiplexed electrical detection of cancer markers with nanowire sensor arrays. Nature Biotechnology , 23 (10) , 1294-1301. https://doi.org/10.1038/nbt1138

Identifiers

DOI
10.1038/nbt1138
PMID
16170313

Data Quality

Data completeness: 86%