Patent · US Active

Method and apparatus for target detection using electrode-bound viruses

US8513001B2 · kind B2 · utility

17Cited by
0References
16Claims
0Family size

Assignee

Inventors

Key dates

Filing dateMar 9, 2007
Grant dateAug 20, 2013
Priority date
Expiry dateMay 21, 2029

Classification

  • Technology area (CPC G)Physics
  • CPC primaryG01N27/3277
  • WIPO fieldMeasurement
  • WIPO sectorInstruments

Abstract

A biosensor capable of detecting the presence and/or concentration of an analyte or biomarker includes at least one electrically conductive electrode operatively coupled to an impedance analyzer for measuring the change in the resistive impedance of the electrode in response to an applied alternating current at a plurality of frequencies. In one embodiment, at least one electrode is covered with a self-assembled monolayer that is chemically bonded to a surface. A plurality of virus particles such as phage viruses are immobilized on the self-assembled monolayer and may be exposed to a test or sample solution. The virus particles may be obtained from phage-displayed libraries to detect a wide variety of targets including, for example, DNA, RNA, small molecules, and proteins or polypeptides. In another embodiment, the virus particles are electrostatically bound to a substrate in between a pair of elongated electrodes disposed on a substrate.

Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.