Three-Dimensional Interfacing of Cells with Hierarchical Silicon Nano/Microstructures for Midinfrared Interrogation of In Situ Captured Proteins

Autor(en): Flesch, Julia
Bettenhausen, Maximilian
Kazmierczak, Marcin
Klesse, Wolfgang M.
Skibitzki, Oliver
Psathaki, Olympia E.
Kurre, Rainer 
Capellini, Giovanni
Guha, Subhajit
Schroeder, Thomas
Witzigmann, Bernd
You, Changjiang 
Piehler, Jacob 
Stichwörter: cell-sensor-interfacing; CMOS microfabrication; in situ protein immobilization; IR refractive index sensing; label-free protein sensing; Materials Science; Materials Science, Multidisciplinary; Nanoscience & Nanotechnology; Science & Technology - Other Topics; SPECTROSCOPY
Erscheinungsdatum: 2021
Herausgeber: AMER CHEMICAL SOC
Journal: ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volumen: 13
Ausgabe: 7
Startseite: 8049
Seitenende: 8059
Zusammenfassung: 
Label-free optical detection of biomolecules is currently limited by a lack of specificity rather than sensitivity. To exploit the much more characteristic refractive index dispersion in the mid-infrared (IR) regime, we have engineered three-dimensional IR-resonant silicon micropillar arrays (Si-MPAs) for protein sensing. By exploiting the unique hierarchical nano- and microstructured design of these Si-MPAs attained by CMOS-compatible silicon-based microfabrication processes, we achieved an optimized interrogation of surface protein binding. Based on spatially resolved surface functionalization, we demonstrate controlled three-dimensional interfacing of mammalian cells with Si-MPAs. Spatially controlled surface functionalization for site-specific protein immobilization enabled efficient targeting of soluble and membrane proteins into sensing hotspots directly from cells cultured on Si-MPAs. Protein binding to Si-MPA hotspots at submonolayer level was unambiguously detected by conventional Fourier transform IR spectroscopy. The compatibility with cost-effective CMOS-based microfabrication techniques readily allows integration of this novel IR transducer into fully fledged bioanalytical microdevices for selective and sensitive protein sensing.
ISSN: 19448244
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.0c22421

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