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Organic Transistors Incorporating Lipid Monolayers for Drug Interaction Studies

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Author(s):
Cavassin, Priscila ; Pappa, Anna-Maria ; Pitsalidis, Charalampos ; Barbosa, Henrique F. P. ; Colucci, Renan ; Saez, Janire ; Tuchman, Yaakov ; Salleo, Alberto ; Faria, Gregorio C. ; Owens, Roisin M.
Total Authors: 10
Document type: Journal article
Source: ADVANCED MATERIALS TECHNOLOGIES; v. 5, n. 3, p. 5-pg., 2019-10-18.
Abstract

Cell membranes are fundamental for cellular function as they protect the cell and control passage in and out of the cell. Despite their clear significance, cell membranes are often difficult to study, due to their complexity and the lack of available technologies to interface with them and transduce their functions. Overcoming this complexity by developing simple, reductionist models can facilitate their study. Indeed, lipid layers represent a simplified yet representative model for a cell membrane. Lipid layers are highly insulating, a property that is directly affected by changes in lipid packing or membrane fluidity. Such physical changes in the membrane models can be characterized by coupling them with an electronic transducer. Herein, a lipid monolayer that is stabilized between two immiscible solvents is integrated with an organic electrochemical transistor, which is capable of operating in a biphasic solvent mixture. The platform is used to evaluate how lidocaine, a widely used anesthetic the working mechanism of which is still a matter of debate, interacts with the cell membrane. The present study provides evidence that the anesthetic directly interacts with the lipids in the membrane, affecting their packing and therefore the monolayer permeability. The proposed platform provides an elegant solution for studying compound-membrane interactions. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 16/24694-0 - A universal platform for fabricating organic electrochemical devices and its application in biosensing
Grantee:Priscila Cavassin
Support Opportunities: Scholarships in Brazil - Master
FAPESP's process: 18/14801-9 - Biomimetic organic electrochemical transistors for measuring bacterial membrane disruption
Grantee:Priscila Cavassin
Support Opportunities: Scholarships abroad - Research Internship - Master's degree