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research article

Phenylalanine Monitoring via Aptamer-Field-Effect Transistor Sensors

Cheung, Kevin
•
Yang, Kyung-Ae
•
Nakatsuka, Nako  
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October 21, 2019
ACS Sensors

Determination of the amino acid phenylalanine is important for lifelong disease management in patients with phenylketonuria, a genetic disorder in which phenylalanine accumulates and persists at levels that alter brain development and cause permanent neurological damage and cognitive dysfunction. Recent approaches for treating phenylketonuria focus on injectable medications that efficiently break down phenylalanine but sometimes result in detrimentally low phenylalanine levels. We have identified new DNA aptamers for phenylalanine in two formats, initially as fluorescent sensors and then, incorporated with field-effect transistors (FETs). Aptamer-FET sensors detected phenylalanine over a wide range of concentrations (fM to mM). para-Chlorophenylalanine, which inhibits the enzyme that converts phenylalanine to tyrosine, was used to induce hyperphenylalaninemia during brain development in mice. Aptamer-FET sensors were specific for phenylalanine versus para-chlorophenylalanine and differentiated changes in mouse serum phenylalanine at levels expected in patients. Aptamer-FETs can be used to investigate models of hyperphenylalanemia in the presence of structurally related enzyme inhibitors, as well as naturally occurring amino acids. Nucleic acid-based receptors that discriminate phenylalanine analogs, some that differ by a single substituent, indicate a refined ability to identify aptamers with binding pockets tailored for high affinity and specificity. Aptamers of this type integrated into FETs enable rapid, electronic, label-free phenylalanine sensing.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acssensors.9b01963
Author(s)
Cheung, Kevin
Yang, Kyung-Ae
Nakatsuka, Nako  
Zhao, Chuanzhen
Ye, Mao
Jung, Michael
Yang, Hongyan
Weiss, Paul
Stojanović, Milan
Andrews, Anne M.
Date Issued

2019-10-21

Published in
ACS Sensors
Volume

4

Issue

12

Start page

3308

End page

3317

Subjects

Amino acid

•

Biosensor

•

DNA aptamer

•

Phenylalanine

•

Phenylketonuria

•

Serum

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
CHEMINA  
RelationURL/DOI

IsSupplementedBy

https://doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.9b01963
Available on Infoscience
January 23, 2024
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/203114
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