Publication | Open Access
Accurately Detecting Trace‐Level Infectious Agents by an Electro‐Enhanced Graphene Transistor
15
Citations
31
References
2023
Year
NanosensorsEngineeringBiochemical SensorsBiomedical EngineeringBiosensorsGraphene NanomeshesBiosensing SystemsNanoelectronicsBioanalysisMycobacterium TuberculosisAnalytical ChemistryBioimagingAnalytical BiotechnologyNanosensorDiagnostic DeviceField‐effect TransistorBiomedical AnalysisElectro‐enhanced Graphene TransistorEpidemic PreventionBiomedical SensorsBiomedical DiagnosticsBioelectronicsGraphene FiberGrapheneElectroanalytical SensorWearable BiosensorsBiomedical Applications
Abstract For epidemic prevention and control, molecular diagnostic techniques such as field‐effect transistor (FET) biosensors is developed for rapid screening of infectious agents, including Mycobacterium tuberculosis , SARS‐CoV‐2, rhinovirus, and others. They obtain results within a few minutes but exhibit diminished sensitivity (<75%) in unprocessed biological samples due to insufficient recognition of low‐abundance analytes. Here, an electro‐enhanced strategy is developed for the precise detection of trace‐level infectious agents by liquid‐gate graphene field‐effect transistors (LG‐GFETs). The applied gate bias preconcentrates analytes electrostatically at the sensing interface, contributing to a 10‐fold signal enhancement and a limit of detection down to 5 × 10 −16 g mL −1 MPT64 protein in serum. Of 402 participants, sensitivity in tuberculosis, COVID‐19 and human rhinovirus assays reached 97.3% (181 of 186), and specificity is 98.6% (213 of 216) with a response time of <60 s. This study solves a long‐standing dilemma that response speed and result accuracy of molecular diagnostics undergo trade‐offs in unprocessed biological samples, holding unique promise in high‐quality and population‐wide screening of infectious diseases.
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