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Nonperturbative chemical modification of graphene for protein micropatterning

Authors
Kodali, V.K.Scrimgeour, J.Kim, S.Hankinson, J.H.Carroll, K.M.De, Heer W.A.Berger, C.Curtis, J.E.
Issue Date
Feb-2011
Publisher
American Chemical Society
Keywords
Glucose oxidase; Protein immobilization; Tissue engineering; Electronic band structure; Esters; Glucose; Bioscience applications; Geometry; Glucose sensors; Molecules; Tissue; Chemical modification; Biomolecular sensors; Bifunctional molecules; Graphene
Citation
Langmuir, v.27, no.3, pp 863 - 865
Pages
3
Indexed
SCI
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Langmuir
Volume
27
Number
3
Start Page
863
End Page
865
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/39067
DOI
10.1021/la1033178
ISSN
0743-7463
1520-5827
Abstract
Graphene's extraordinary physical properties and its planar geometry make it an ideal candidate for a wide array of applications, many of which require controlled chemical modification and the spatial organization of molecules on its surface. In particular, the ability to functionalize and micropattern graphene with proteins is relevant to bioscience applications such as biomolecular sensors, single-cell sensors, and tissue engineering. We report a general strategy for the noncovalent chemical modification of epitaxial graphene for protein immobilization and micropatterning. We show that bifunctional molecule pyrenebutanoic acid-succinimidyl ester (PYR-NHS), composed of the hydrophobic pyrene and the reactive succinimide ester group, binds to graphene noncovalently but irreversibly. We investigate whether the chemical treatment perturbs the electronic band structure of graphene using X-ray photoemission (XPS) and Raman spectroscopy. Our results show that the sp2 hybridization remains intact and that the π band maintains its characteristic Lorentzian shape in the Raman spectra. The modified graphene surfaces, which bind specifically to amines in proteins, are micropatterned with arrays of fluorescently labeled proteins that are relevant to glucose sensors (glucose oxidase) and cell sensor and tissue engineering applications (laminin). © 2010 American Chemical Society.
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