Electrochemical monitoring of enzymatic cleavage in nanochannels with nanoparticle-based enhancement: determination of MMP-9 biomarker.
David Valero-CalvoCelia Toyos-RodriguezFrancisco Javier García-AlonsoAlfredo de la Escosura- MuñizPublished in: Mikrochimica acta (2023)
For the first time the use of nanoparticles as carriers of an enzymatic substrate immobilized inside nanoporous alumina membranes is proposed with the aim of amplifying the nanochannel blocking produced and, consequently, improving the efficiency of an enzyme determination through enzymatic cleavage. Streptavidin-modified polystyrene nanoparticles (PSNPs) are proposed as carrier agents, contributing to the steric and the electrostatic blockage due to the charge they present at different pH values. Electrostatic blockage is the predominant effect that governs the blockage in the interior of the nanochannel and is dependent not just in the charge inside the channel, but also in the polarity of the redox indicator used. Hence, the effect of using negatively charged ([Fe(CN) 6 ] 4- ) and positively charged ([Ru(NH 3 ) 6 ] 3+ ) redox indicator ions is studied for the first time. Under the optimum conditions, matrix-metalloproteinase 9 (MMP-9) is detected at clinically relevant levels (100-1200 ng/mL) showing a detection limit of 75 ng/mL and a quantification limit of 251 ng/mL with good reproducibility (RSD: 8%) and selectivity, also showing an excellent performance in real samples with acceptable recovery percentages (in the range around 80-110%). Overall, our approach represents a cheap and fast sensing methodology of great potential in point-of-care diagnostics.
Keyphrases
- hydrogen peroxide
- molecularly imprinted
- solid phase extraction
- label free
- dna binding
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- cell migration
- gold nanoparticles
- metal organic framework
- lymph node metastasis
- solar cells
- nitric oxide
- squamous cell carcinoma
- quantum dots
- room temperature
- transcription factor
- high resolution
- real time pcr
- amino acid
- climate change
- simultaneous determination