Premium
Design and testing of a packaged microfluidic cell for the multiplexed electrochemical detection of cancer markers
Author(s) -
Henry Olivier Yves,
Fragoso Alex,
Beni Valerio,
Laboria Noemi,
Sánchez Josep Lluis Acero,
Latta Daniel,
Von Germar Frithoj,
Drese Klaus,
Katakis Ioanis,
O'Sullivan Ciara Kathleen
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
electrophoresis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.666
H-Index - 158
eISSN - 1522-2683
pISSN - 0173-0835
DOI - 10.1002/elps.200900368
Subject(s) - materials science , microfluidics , electrode , nanotechnology , fluidics , biomedical engineering , chemistry , medicine , aerospace engineering , engineering
We present the rapid prototyping of electrochemical sensor arrays integrated to microfluidics towards the fabrication of integrated microsystems prototypes for point‐of‐care diagnostics. Rapid prototyping of microfluidics was realised by high‐precision milling of polycarbonate sheets, which offers flexibility and rapid turnover of the desired designs. On the other hand, the electrochemical sensor arrays were fabricated using standard photolithographic and metal (gold and silver) deposition technology in order to realise three‐electrode cells comprising gold counter and working electrodes as well as silver reference electrode. The integration of fluidic chips and electrode arrays was realised via a laser‐machined double‐sided adhesive gasket that allowed creating the microchannels necessary for sample and reagent delivery. We focused our attention on the reproducibility of the electrode array preparation for the multiplexed detection of tumour markers such as carcinoembryonic antigen and prostate‐specific antigen as well as genetic breast cancer markers such as estrogen receptor‐α, plasminogen activator urokinase receptor, epidermal growth factor receptor and erythroblastic leukemia viral oncogene homolog 2. We showed that by carefully controlling the electrode surface pre‐treatment and derivatisation via thiolated antibodies or short DNA probes that the detection of several key health parameters on a single chip was achievable with excellent reproducibility and high sensitivity.