4.7 Article

Invertase-nanogold clusters decorated plant membranes for fluorescence-based sucrose sensor

Journal

JOURNAL OF NANOBIOTECHNOLOGY
Volume 13, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s12951-015-0089-1

Keywords

Nanogold clusters; Gold nanoparticles; Invertase; Onion membrane; Sucrose; Glucose; Analyte; Fluorescence; Quenching-based biosensor

Funding

  1. National Science Council, Taipei, Taiwan [NSC-100-2221-E-002-032]
  2. National Taiwan University [101R4000]

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In the present study, invertase-mediated nanogold clusters were synthesized on onion membranes, and their application for sucrose biosensor fabrication was investigated. Transmission electron microscopy revealed free nanoparticles of various sizes (diameter similar to 5 to 50 nm) along with clusters of nanogold (similar to 95 to 200 nm) on the surface of inner epidermal membranes of onions (Allium cepa L.). Most of the polydispersed nanoparticles were spherical, although some were square shaped, triangular, hexagonal or rod-shaped. Ultraviolet-visible spectrophotometric observations showed the characteristic peak for nanoparticles decorated invertase-onion membrane at approximately 301 nm. When excited at 320 nm in the presence of sucrose, the membranes exhibited a photoemission peak at 348 nm. The fluorescence lifetime of this nanogold modified onion membrane was 6.20 ns, compared to 2.47 ns for invertase-onion membrane without nanogold. Therefore, a sucrose detection scheme comprised of an invertase/nanogold decorated onion membrane was successfully developed. This fluorescent nanogold-embedded onion membrane drop-test sensor exhibited wide acidic to neutral working pH range (4.0-7.0) with a response time 30 seconds (<1 min). The fabricated quenching-based probe had a low detection limit (2x10(-9) M) with a linear dynamic range of 2.25x10(-9) to 4.25x10(-8) M for sensing sucrose. A microplate designed with an enzyme-nanomaterial-based sensor platform exhibited a high compliance, with acceptable percentage error for the detection of sucrose in green tea samples in comparison to a traditional method. With some further, modifications, this fabricated enzyme-nanogold onion membrane sensor probe could be used to estimate glucose concentrations for a variety of analytical samples.

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