N-Rich and Sulfur-Doped Nano Hollow Carbons with High Oxidase-like Activity Prepared Using a Green Template of CaCO 3 for Bacteriostasis.
Liangqin LiuJun DengYinlong WangXin HeHuibing HeXiaopeng ChenDankui LiaoZhangfa TongPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2023)
Nanozymes, enzyme-mimicking nanomaterials, have attracted increasing attention due to their low cost, high stability, and catalytic ability compared with natural enzymes. However, the catalytic efficiency of the nanozymes is still relatively low, and catalytic reaction mechanisms remain unclear. To address these issues, herein we prepared nitrogen-riched and sulfur-codoped nano hollow carbons (N/S-HCS) using a green and useful template of CaCO 3 . N/S-HCS exhibits enhanced oxidase-like activity and catalytic kinetic performance. It could directly oxidize the colorless 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) to the heavy blue colored ox-TMB without H 2 O 2 . The maximum reaction rate ( V max ) is 186.7 × 10 -8 M·s -1 , and Michaelis-Menten constant ( K m ) is 0.162 mM. DFT results show that N and S codoping could work synergistically to provide more active sites, resulting in the superior ability to adsorb oxygen and enhanced catalytic activity. Meantime, we develop a multispectral characterization strategy to unravel catalytic reaction mechanisms about N/S-HCS. It successfully induces the generation of superoxide ( • O 2 - ) and hydroxyl ( • OH) during the colorimetric reaction which are the key intermediate products of the catalytic reaction. Furthermore, N/S-HCS increased the cellular reactive oxygen species level significantly and induced bacteriostasis to more than 95% of Escherichia coli .
Keyphrases
- crystal structure
- escherichia coli
- low cost
- reactive oxygen species
- molecularly imprinted
- hydrogen peroxide
- gold nanoparticles
- electron transfer
- working memory
- sensitive detection
- quantum dots
- cystic fibrosis
- highly efficient
- nitric oxide
- oxidative stress
- living cells
- molecular dynamics simulations
- simultaneous determination