$$\rightleftharpoonup{xx}$$
$$\longleftharp{xx}$$,
$$\longrightharp{xx}$$,
An important note is that none of the experiments described above will work properly unless the electrodes have been properly cleaned. Here is a guide to our electrochemical cleaning procedure. When working with CH Instruments potentiostats, we run these cleaning steps using a set of three macro programs.
Phase Zero (E-clean O)
Immerse the electrodes in 0.5M H2SO4 and connect them to the working electrodes of a potentiostat. Also attach and immerse an Ag/AgCl reference and platinum counter electrode. Start with an oxidation step (2 V for 5 s) and then a reduction step (0.35 V for 10 s).
Phase One (E-clean 1)
Initiate oxidation and reduction scans under the same acidic conditions (0.5M H2SO4) from 0.35 to 1.5 V (20 scans at a scan rate of 4 V/s and a sample interval of 0.01 V, followed by four scans at a scan rate of 0.1 V/s and a sample interval of 0.01 V).
Phase Two (E-clean 2)
Conduct another set of electrochemical oxidation and reduction scans under acidic conditions (0.01 M KCl/0.1 MH2SO4) covering four different potential ranges (all performed for 10 segments at a scan rate of 0.1 V s 1 and a sample interval of 0.01 V): (i) potential range from 0.2 to 0.75 V; (ii) potential range from 0.2 to 1.0 V; (iii) potential range from 0.2 to 1.25 V; (iv) potential range from 0.2 to 1.5 V.
Many types of gold electrodes can be used to conduct these experiments. In addition to gold disk electrodes such as those employed here, we have had success with microfabricated gold surfaces, gold wire, and gold on printed circuit boards.
Along with the sensors described in this paper, many other electrochemical DNA biosensor architectures have been reported. This includes sensors with a pseudoknot12, triple strand13, sandwich14, super sandwich15, or triplex16 architecture.
In the future, we expect that these sensors will be used in point of care medical diagnostics. They have been successfully integrated into several microfluidic devices17,18, and offer many advantages over optical analyte detection systems. In particular, these sensors can function in turbid, optically dense and highly auto-fluorescent samples.