Investigator

Kenneth I. Ozoemena

South African Research Chair Initiative (SARChI) Chair (Tier 1): Materials Electrochemistry and Energy Technologies (MEET) · University of the Witwatersrand, School of Chemistry

About

Research Interests

KIOKenneth I. Ozoeme…
Papers(2)
Advances in human pap…Electrochemical Immun…
Collaborators(5)
Frankie RawsonLeshweni J. ShaiOkoroike C. OzoemenaOluwafunmilola OlaAicheng Chen
Institutions(4)
University Of The Wit…University of Notting…Tshwane University of…University Of Guelph

Papers

Electrochemical Immunosensor for Ultra-Low Detection of Human Papillomavirus Biomarker for Cervical Cancer

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is the causative agent for cervical cancer. Of the various types of HPV, the high-risk HPV-16 type is the most important antigenic high-risk HPV. In this work, the antigenic HPV-16 L1 peptide was immobilized on a glassy carbon electrode and used to detect several concentrations of the anti-HPV-16 L1 antibody, and vice versa. Two electrode platforms were used: onion-like carbon (OLC) and its polyacrylonitrile (OLC-PAN) composites. Both platforms gave a wide linear concentration range (1.95 fg/mL to 6.25 ng/mL), excellent sensitivity (>5.2 μA/log ([HPV-16 L1, fg/mL]), and extra-ordinarily low limit of detection (LoD) of 1.83 fg/mL (32.7 aM) and 0.61 fg/mL (10.9 aM) for OLC-PAN and OLC-based immunosensors, respectively. OLC-PAN modified with the HPV-16 L1 protein showed low LoD for the HPV-16 L1 antibody (2.54 fg/mL, i.e., 45.36 aM), proving its potential use for screening purposes. The specificity of detection was proven with the anti-ovalbumin antibody (anti-OVA) and native ovalbumin protein (OVA). An immobilized antigenic HPV-16 L1 peptide showed insignificant interaction with anti-OVA in contrast with the excellent interaction with anti-HPV-16 L1 antibody, thus proving high specificity. The application of the immunosensor as a potential point-of-care (PoC) diagnostic device was investigated with screen-printed carbon electrodes, which detected ultra-low (ca. 0.7 fg/mL ≈ 12.5 aM) and high (ca. 12 μg/mL ≈ 0.21 μM) concentrations. This study represents the lowest LoD reported for HPV-16 L1. It opens the door for further investigation with other electrode platforms and realization of PoC diagnostic devices for screening and testing of HPV biomarkers for cervical cancer.

274Works
2Papers
5Collaborators
Uterine Cervical NeoplasmsEarly Detection of CancerPapillomavirus Infections

Positions

2021–

South African Research Chair Initiative (SARChI) Chair (Tier 1): Materials Electrochemistry and Energy Technologies (MEET)

University of the Witwatersrand · School of Chemistry

2020–

Research Professor: Materials Electrochemistry & Energy Technologies

University of the Witwatersrand · School of Chemistry

2017–

Professor of Materials Electrochemistry and Energy Technologies

University of the Witwatersrand · School of Chemistry

2009–

Chief Research Scientist & Research Group Leader

Council for Scientific and Industrial Research · Materials Science and manufacturing

2006–

Senior Lecturer

University of Pretoria · Chemistry

2004–

Andrew Mellon Lecturer

Rhodes University Faculty of Science · Chemistry

2002–

Claude Leon Post-doctoral Research Fellow

University of Pretoria · Chemistry

Education

2008

Postgraduate Diploma in Higher Education and Training (PGDHE)

University of South Africa · Education

2002

PhD

Rhodes University · Chemistry

1998

MSc

University of Lagos College of Medicine · Pharmaceutical Sciences

1997

MSc

University of Lagos · Chemistry

1992

BSc (Hons)

Abia State University · Industrial Chemistry

Country

ZA

Keywords
Materials Electrochemistry; Energy Storage; Energy Conversion; Electrochemical Sensors