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Holographic biosensors made of dna-functionalised hydrogels for in vitro diagnostic

  • Autores: Paola Zezza
  • Directores de la Tesis: Ángel Maquieira Catala (dir. tes.), María José Bañuls Polo (dir. tes.)
  • Lectura: En la Universitat Politècnica de València ( España ) en 2023
  • Idioma: inglés
  • Tribunal Calificador de la Tesis: M. Holgado (presid.), Rosa Belén Ferrer Ribera (secret.), Dervil Cody (voc.)
  • Programa de doctorado: Programa de Doctorado en Técnicas Experimentales en Química por la Universitat de València (Estudi General) y la Universitat Politècnica de València
  • Materias:
  • Enlaces
    • Tesis en acceso abierto en: RiuNet
  • Resumen
    • The PhD thesis focuses on the development of an analyte-sensitive hydrogel, functionalised with DNA probes, with a diffractive structure as an optical transducer for in vitro diagnostic applications. The first chapter includes an overview of the different concepts related to biosensing, recent developments in the in vitro diagnostics market and, in particular, DNA biosensors. Furthermore, the synthesis and characterisation of hydrogels, their role as a support matrix in biosensing and immobilisation strategies are presented. Finally, the basic concepts of holography as a new detection strategy and the role of different diffraction gratings in biosensing are explained. Then, in Chapter 2, the objectives of this project are discussed. The aim of this research is to develop hydrogels that incorporate DNA probes and provide them with a diffractive structure to act as label-free optical transducers. Two types of diffractive structures are considered: surface-relief holographic gratings (SRGs) and volume transmission gratings (VTGs). The initial phase of this work focused on the optimisation of hydrogels, adjusting their composition to act as holographic biosensors. Acrylamide and bisacrylamide were selected for hydrogel preparation by free radical polymerisation reaction. Furthermore, in order to introduce the analyte response into the 3D hydrogel network, different bioreceptor immobilisation strategies had to be investigated and fine-tuned. In chapter 3, the optimised strategy is to directly incorporate acridite-modified DNA probes by copolymerisation with acrylamide monomers during hydrogel formation. The DNA-functionalised hydrogels were characterised by fluorescence imaging and their versatility was explored by microarray fabrication. Finally, the optimised analyte-responsive hydrogel was used as a platform for SRG preparation. Chapter 4 describes another approach adopted for functionalisation of the hydrogel with DNA probes. A propargyl acrylate comonomer was added to the acrylamide hydrogel in order to introduce the presence of alkyl residues and facilitate further incorporation of the DNA probes. The DNA probes used had thiol end-groups and were incorporated by thiol-ene/thiol-yo click chemistry, due to the presence of double and triple C-C bonds. With this strategy, two approaches to DNA probe immobilisation were demonstrated: during and after hydrogel synthesis. Preliminary results showed that SRGs have the potential to directly detect oligonucleotide hybridisation in a label-free format. In chapter 5, the recording process of unslanted VTGs in hydrogel layers was optimised to improve transducer performance. After careful evaluation of holographic recording parameters, incubation solution compositions and incubation times, the VTG structures were recorded with good reproducibility, achieving excellent diffraction efficiency. In addition, their stability in water for bioassays was studied. Finally, oligonucleotide-modified VTGs were found to respond selectively by hybridising only to the complementary target, while retaining their diffraction properties. The research work demonstrated the feasibility of using diffractive networks in hydrogel layers as label-free biosensors, capable of detecting DNA probes, complementary to the immobilised sequence, in an aqueous medium. Finally, in chapter 6, the performance and applicability of the different approaches studied are comparatively analysed and future prospects of nucleic acid hydrogels for holographic detection are discussed.


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