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Electrochemical Sensing of the Peptide Drug Exendin-4 Using a Versatile Nucleic Acid Nanostructure.

ACS Sens · 2022

Last updated 2026-05-28

Researchers developed a new method to measure levels of exendin-4, a peptide drug used to treat diabetes, using a DNA-based sensor. The sensor worked in 98% of human blood serum samples and could detect drug levels in the low nanomolar range, which falls between the dose given to patients and the therapeutic range needed for treatment.

AI summary of the abstract below.

JournalACS Sens, 2022
Citations5
Relative citation ratio0.56
NIH percentile32
Molecules

Abstract

Although endogenous peptides and peptide-based therapeutics are both highly relevant to human health, there are few approaches for sensitive biosensing of this class of molecules with minimized workflow. In this work, we have further expanded on the generalizability of our recently developed DNA nanostructure architecture by applying it to electrochemical (EC) peptide quantification. While DNA-small molecule conjugates were used in a prior work to make sensors for small molecule and protein analytes, here DNA-peptide conjugates were incorporated into the nanostructure at the electrode surfaces, and antibody displacement permitted rapid peptide sensing. Interestingly, multivalent DNA-peptide conjugates were found to be detrimental to the assay readout, yet these effects could be minimized by solution-phase bioconjugation. The final biosensor was validated for quantifying exendin-4 (4.2 kDa)─a human glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor agonist important in diabetes therapy─for the first time using EC methods with minimal workflow. The sensor was functional in 98% human serum, and the low nanomolar assay range lies between the injected dose concentration and the therapeutic range, boding well for future applications in therapeutic drug monitoring.

Verbatim abstract via PubMed 35180342 ↗