Surface-Controlled Sialoside-Based Biosensing of Viral and Bacterial Neuraminidases.
Israel AlshanskiSuraj ToraskarDaniel Gordon-LevitanMarco MassettiPrashant JainLuigi VaccaroRagahvendra KikkeriMattan HurevichShlomo YitzchaikPublished in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2024)
Neuraminidases (NA) are sialic acid-cleaving enzymes that are used by both bacteria and viruses. These enzymes have sialoside structure-related binding and cleaving preferences. Differentiating between these enzymes requires using a large array of hard-to-access sialosides. In this work, we used electrochemical impedimetric biosensing to differentiate among several pathogene-related NAs. We used a limited set of sialosides and tailored the surface properties. Various sialosides were grafted on two different surfaces with unique properties. Electrografting on glassy carbon electrodes provided low-density sialoside-functionalized surfaces with a hydrophobic submonolayer. A two-step assembly on gold electrodes provided a denser sialoside layer on a negatively charged submonolayer. The synthesis of each sialoside required dozens of laborious steps. Utilizing the unique protein-electrode interaction modes resulted in richer biodata without increasing the synthetic load. These principles allowed for profiling NAs and determining the efficacy of various antiviral inhibitors.