Non-perturbative Quantification of Ionic Charge Transfer through Nm-Scale Protein Pores Using Graphene Microelectrodes
ORAL
Abstract
Conventional electrical methods for detecting charge transfer through protein pores perturb the electrostatic condition of the solution and chemical reactivity of the pore, and are not suitable to be used for complex biofluids. We developed a non-perturbative methodology (\textasciitilde fW input power) for quantifying trans-pore electrical current and detecting the pore status (i.e., open vs. closes) via graphene microelectrodes. Ferritin was used as a model protein featuring a large interior compartment, well-separated from the exterior solution with discrete pores as charge commuting channels. The charge flowing through the ferritin pores transfers into the graphene microelectrode and is recorded by an electrometer. In this example, our methodology enables the quantification of an inorganic nanoparticle--protein nanopore interaction in complex biofluids.
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Authors
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Jinglei Ping
University of Pennsylvania
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A. T. Charlie Johnson
University of Pennsylvania