4.7 Article

Electrochemical Immunosensors with PQQ-Decorated Carbon Nanotubes as Signal Labels for Electrocatalytic Oxidation of Tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11071757

Keywords

electrochemical immunosensor; nanocatalyst; redox cycling; quinone

Funding

  1. Program for Innovative Research Team of Science and Technology in the University of Henan Province [21IRTSTHN005]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21804085]
  3. Research Funds for the Henan Key Laboratory of Biomolecular Recognition and Sensing [HKLBRSK1902]

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Nanocatalysts are a promising alternative to natural enzymes for electrochemical biosensors, but face barriers in direct electron transfer that can be overcome with electron mediators. This work presents a scheme for designing electrochemical immunosensors with nanocatalysts as signal labels, achieving a low detection limit with success factors including slow chemical reactions and high turnover frequency.
Nanocatalysts are a promising alternative to natural enzymes as the signal labels of electrochemical biosensors. However, the surface modification of nanocatalysts and sensor electrodes with recognition elements and blockers may form a barrier to direct electron transfer, thus limiting the application of nanocatalysts in electrochemical immunoassays. Electron mediators can accelerate the electron transfer between nanocatalysts and electrodes. Nevertheless, it is hard to simultaneously achieve fast electron exchange between nanocatalysts and redox mediators as well as substrates. This work presents a scheme for the design of electrochemical immunosensors with nanocatalysts as signal labels, in which pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) is the redox-active center of the nanocatalyst. PQQ was decorated on the surface of carbon nanotubes to catalyze the electrochemical oxidation of tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) with ferrocenylmethanol (FcM) as the electron mediator. With prostate-specific antigen (PSA) as the model analyte, the detection limit of the sandwich-type immunosensor was found to be 5 pg/mL. The keys to success for this scheme are the slow chemical reaction between TCEP and ferricinum ions, and the high turnover frequency between ferricinum ions, PQQ. and TCEP. This work should be valuable for designing of novel nanolabels and nanocatalytic schemes for electrochemical biosensors.

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