Enzyme Nanosheet-Based Electrochemical Aspartate Biosensor for Fish Point-of-Care Applications.
Thenmozhi RajarathinamDinakaran ThirumalaiSivaguru JayaramanSeonghye KimMinho KwonHyun-Jong PaikSuhkmann KimMijeong KangSeung-Cheol ChangPublished in: Micromachines (2022)
Bacterial infections in marine fishes are linked to mass mortality issues; hence, rapid detection of an infection can contribute to achieving a faster diagnosis using point-of-care testing. There has been substantial interest in identifying diagnostic biomarkers that can be detected in major organs to predict bacterial infections. Aspartate was identified as an important biomarker for bacterial infection diagnosis in olive flounder ( Paralichthys olivaceus ) fish. To determine aspartate levels, an amperometric biosensor was designed based on bi-enzymes, namely, glutamate oxidase (GluOx) and aspartate transaminase (AST), which were physisorbed on copolymer reduced graphene oxide (P-rGO), referred to as enzyme nanosheets (GluOx-ASTENs). The GluOx-ASTENs were drop casted onto a Prussian blue electrodeposited screen-printed carbon electrode (PB/SPCE). The proposed biosensor was optimized by operating variables including the enzyme loading amount, coreactant (α-ketoglutarate) concentration, and pH. Under optimal conditions, the biosensor displayed the maximum current responses within 10 s at the low applied potential of -0.10 V vs. the internal Ag/AgCl reference. The biosensor exhibited a linear response from 1.0 to 2.0 mM of aspartate concentrations with a sensitivity of 0.8 µA mM -1 cm -2 and a lower detection limit of approximately 500 µM. Moreover, the biosensor possessed high reproducibility, good selectivity, and efficient storage stability.
Keyphrases
- gold nanoparticles
- reduced graphene oxide
- label free
- quantum dots
- sensitive detection
- type diabetes
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- high throughput
- highly efficient
- cardiovascular events
- human health
- cardiovascular disease
- climate change
- coronary artery disease
- risk assessment
- mass spectrometry
- nitric oxide
- drug release
- aqueous solution
- simultaneous determination