Ionic contrast across a lipid membrane for Debye length extension: towards an ultimate bioelectronic transducer

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Abstract

Despite technological advances in biomolecule detections, evaluation of molecular interactions via potentiometric devices under ion-enriched solutions has remained a long-standing problem. To avoid severe performance degradation of bioelectronics by ionic screening effects, we cover probe surfaces of field effect transistors with a single film of the supported lipid bilayer, and realize respectable potentiometric signals from receptor–ligand bindings irrespective of ionic strength of bulky solutions by placing an ion-free water layer underneath the supported lipid bilayer. High-energy X-ray reflectometry together with the circuit analysis and molecular dynamics simulation discovered biochemical findings that effective electrical signals dominantly originated from the sub-nanoscale conformational change of lipids in the course of receptor–ligand bindings. Beyond thorough analysis on the underlying mechanism at the molecular level, the proposed supported lipid bilayer-field effect transistor platform ensures the world-record level of sensitivity in molecular detection with excellent reproducibility regardless of molecular charges and environmental ionic conditions.

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Lee, D., Jung, W. H., Lee, S., Yu, E. S., Lee, T., Kim, J. H., … Kim, C. (2021). Ionic contrast across a lipid membrane for Debye length extension: towards an ultimate bioelectronic transducer. Nature Communications, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-24122-8

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