Ultrasensitive Alzheimer's Disease Biomarker Detection with Nanopillar Photonic Crystal Biosensors

Guilherme S. Arruda, Katie Morris, Augusto Martins, Yue Wang, Sian Sloan-Dennison, Duncan Graham, Steven D. Quinn, Emiliano R. Martins, Thomas F. Krauss

Published: 2025/4/11

Abstract

The recent development of drugs able to mitigate neurodegenerative diseases has created an urgent need for novel diagnostics. Although biomarker detection directly in patients' blood is now possible, low-cost point-of-care tests remain a challenge, because relevant biomarkers, especially amyloid-\beta (A$\beta$) peptides, are small, they occur at very low concentrations, and detecting a single marker is insufficient. Here, we introduce an optical biosensor based on a nanopillar structure that employs a gold nanoparticle amplification strategy. The sensor is able to detect 20 pg/ml of A$\beta$42 and A$\beta$40 in undiluted serum, which is the clinically required level. We also show the detection of the A$\beta$42 and A$\beta$40 peptides in the same channel, which is highly relevant for assessing disease progress and opens a route towards multiplexing. Alongside their simplicity and portability, these nanotechnology innovations make a major contribution to the ability to detect and monitor the progression of neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's.

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