4.7 Article

MoS2/PPy Nanocomposite as a Transducer for Electrochemical Aptasensor of Ampicillin in River Water

Journal

BIOSENSORS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/bios11090311

Keywords

2D MoS2; polypyrrole nanoparticles; electrochemical; biosensor; aptamer; antibiotic

Funding

  1. MEAE
  2. MESRI [39382RE]

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The study introduces an electrochemical aptasensor for the detection of ampicillin, utilizing a nanostructure composed of MoS2 nanosheets and conductive polypyrrole nanoparticles. By studying the structural and morphological properties of the nanocomposite, it was found that the material formed a synergetic effect on the electrochemical redox process. The biosensor demonstrated high sensitivity and selectivity, with a limit of detection of 10 pg/L for ampicillin, making it a promising device for environmental antibiotic detection.
We report the design of an electrochemical aptasensor for ampicillin detection, which is an antibiotic widely used in agriculture and considered to be a water contaminant. We studied the transducing potential of nanostructure composed of MoS2 nanosheets and conductive polypyrrole nanoparticles (PPyNPs) cast on a screen-printed electrode. Fine chemistry is developed to build the biosensors entirely based on robust covalent immobilizations of naphthoquinone as a redox marker and the aptamer. The structural and morphological properties of the nanocomposite were studied by SEM, AFM, and FT-IR. High-resolution XPS measurements demonstrated the formation of a binding between the two nanomaterials and energy transfer affording the formation of heterostructure. Cyclic voltammetry and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy were used to analyze their electrocatalytic properties. We demonstrated that the nanocomposite formed with PPyNPs and MoS2 nanosheets has electro-catalytic properties and conductivity leading to a synergetic effect on the electrochemical redox process of the redox marker. Thus, a highly sensitive redox process was obtained that could follow the recognition process between the apatamer and the target. An amperometric variation of the naphthoquinone response was obtained regarding the ampicillin concentration with a limit of detection (LOD) of 10 pg/L (0.28 pM). A high selectivity towards other contaminants was demonstrated with this biosensor and the analysis of real river water samples without any treatment showed good recovery results thanks to the antifouling properties. This biosensor can be considered a promising device for the detection of antibiotics in the environment as a point-of-use system.

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