A self-correcting fluorescent assay of tyrosinase based on Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 nanozyme.
Ying SunTianran LinCuihong ZengGaoyan JiangXuanhan ZhangFanggui YeShulin ZhaoPublished in: Mikrochimica acta (2021)
A self-correcting fluorescent assay of tyrosinase (TYR) was developed by utilization of Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 as a peroxidase-like nanozyme and a capture probe. Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 nanozyme was selected as an electron donor, and the oxidization product (dopamine-o-quinone) acts as an energy acceptor. First, TYR catalyzes the oxidation of tyramine hydrochloride to dopamine and then to dopamine-o-quinone. Second, Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 with intrinsic peroxidase-like activity decomposes H2O2 to produce ·OH radicals, which further accelerate the oxidation of dopamine to dopamine-o-quinone. Excessive H2O2 and ·OH radicals reduce the interferences from ascorbic acid at the same time providing a self-correcting ability. Dopamine-o-quinone reacts with -NH2 groups on the ligand of Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 through Michael reaction which results in fluorescence quenching. Under 365-nm excitation, the fluorescence emission intensity at 452 nm gradually decreased with increasing TYR concentration varying from 0 to 10 U mL-1. The linear range is from 1 to 5 U mL-1 and the detection limit is 0.05679 U mL-1. This self-correcting fluorescent assay of tyrosinase exhibits good sensitivity and selectivity which is also successfully applied for tyrosinase inhibitor detection. Schematic representation of fluorescent assay for tyrosinase determination based on Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 nanozyme. A self-correcting fluorescent assay for tyrosinase was developed based on the Fe-MIL-88B-NH2 nanozyme.
Keyphrases
- metal organic framework
- quantum dots
- room temperature
- living cells
- uric acid
- label free
- high throughput
- solid phase extraction
- energy transfer
- perovskite solar cells
- hydrogen peroxide
- single molecule
- prefrontal cortex
- photodynamic therapy
- fluorescent probe
- visible light
- nitric oxide
- high resolution
- mass spectrometry
- physical activity
- electron transfer
- liquid chromatography