4.8 Article

Simultaneous electrochemical detection of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide generated from mouse kidney organ tissues

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 79, Issue 20, Pages 7669-7675

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ac070814z

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A planar-type amperometric dual microsensor for simultaneous detection of nitric oxide and carbon monoxide is presented. The sensor consists of a dual platinum microdisk-based working electrode (WE) and a Ag/AgCl counter/reference electrode covered with an expanded poly(tetrafluoroethylene) (retra-tex) gas-permeable membrane. The dual WE possesses two different platinized platinum disks (WE1 and WE2, 250 and 25 mu m in diameter, respectively). The larger WE1 is further modified with electrochemical deposition of tin. Use of two sensing disks different in their size as well as in their surface modification produces apparently different sensitivity ratios of NO to CO at WE1 and at WE2 (similar to 2 and similar to 10, respectively) that are induced by favorable CO oxidation on the surface of tin versus platinum. Anodic currents independently measured at WE1 and at WE2 are successfully converted to the concentrations of NO and CO in the co-presence of these gases using the differentiated sensitivities at each electrode. The sensor is evaluated in terms of its analytical performance: respectable linear dynamic range (sub nM to mu M); low detection limit (similar to 1 nM for NO and <5 nM for CO); selectivity (over nitrite up to similar to 1 mM); and sensitivity (sufficient for analyzing physiological levels of NO and CO). Using the NO/CO dual microsensor, real-time, simultaneous, direct, and quantitative measurements of NO and CO generated from living biological tissue (mouse, c57, kidney) surfaces, for the first time, are reported.

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