4.7 Article

Nanomaterial-based sandwich-type electrochemical aptasensor platform for sensitive voltammetric determination of leptin

Journal

MICROCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 189, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER WIEN
DOI: 10.1007/s00604-022-05487-z

Keywords

Aptasensor; Differential pulse voltammetry; Gold nanoparticles; Leptin; Zinc oxide nanoparticles

Funding

  1. Council of Higher Education (YOK)
  2. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkiye (TUBITAK) [122Z695]
  3. Scientific and Technological Research Council of Turkiye (TUBITAK)

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A sandwich-type electrochemical aptasensor was developed for sensitive detection of leptin in biological samples. The synergistic effect of zinc oxide and gold nanoparticles improved the electrocatalytic activity, allowing for a wide linear concentration range and a low detection limit. The aptasensor demonstrated good selectivity, reproducibility, and stability, making it suitable for practical applications.
A sandwich-type electrochemical aptasensor was designed for sensitive detection of leptin in biological samples, including human serum and human plasma. The developed aptasensor was produced by electrodeposition of gold nanoparticles on a screen-printed electrode modified with zinc oxide nanoparticles. The synergy effect of zinc oxide and gold nanoparticles improved the electrocatalytic activity of the aptasensor. The obtained high surface area allowed more aptamer molecules to be loaded on the electrode surface. Signal amplification significantly increases the detection sensitivity of a developed biosensor. Although the use of nanomaterials is the most preferred detection tool for this purpose, as an alternative, enzyme-catalyzed signal amplification is widely used in the construction of a biosensor due to its specificity and high catalytic efficiency. Therefore, both nanomaterial-supported and an alkaline phosphatase-based aptasensor design were developed, which can produce in situ electroactive product by enzymatic hydrolysis of the inactive substrate to achieve a higher signal-to-background ratio. Under optimal conditions, the developed aptasensor exhibited a wide linear concentration range from 0.01 pg mL(-1) to 100.0 pg mL(-1) with a detection limit of 0.0035 pg mL(-1). While the developed aptasensor provided excellent selectivity in the presence of some interfering compounds, it possessed outstanding reproducibility and stability. In addition, the developed aptasensor has been applied with good recoveries in the range 96.31 to 108.79% in human serum and plasma samples. In conclusion, all the obtained results showed the feasibility of the developed aptasensor for practical applications.

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