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      Electrical detection of VEGFs for cancer diagnoses using anti-vascular endotherial growth factor aptamer-modified Si nanowire FETs.

      Biosensors & Bioelectronics
      Aptamers, Peptide, chemistry, Biosensing Techniques, instrumentation, Electrochemistry, Equipment Design, Equipment Failure Analysis, Immunoassay, Nanotechnology, methods, Nanotubes, ultrastructure, Neoplasm Proteins, analysis, Neoplasms, diagnosis, metabolism, Reproducibility of Results, Sensitivity and Specificity, Silicon, Transistors, Electronic, Tumor Markers, Biological, Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor A

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          Abstract

          We report the real-time, label-free and electrical detection of vascular endotherial growth factor (VEGF) for cancer diagnosis using anti-VEGF aptamer-modified Si nanowire field-effect transistors (SiNW-FETs). Specifically, the high quality single-crystalline SiNWs of both n-type and p-type characters were surface modified with the covalent immobilization of anti-VEGF aptamers, and they were turned into SiNW-FET biosensors for the VEGF detection. We show that the VEGF molecules consistently act on the gate dielectrics of both n-type and p-type SiNW-FETs as electrically positive point-charges; their recognition to anti-VEGF aptamers depletes (accumulates) the charge carriers in the p-type (n-type) SiNW-FETs and thus decreases (increases) the detection currents. The detection limit for VEGFs in this study was determined as 1.04nM and 104pM for the cases of n-type and p-type SiNW-FETs, respectively.

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