Immobilization of myoglobin on Au nanoparticle-decorated carbon nanotube/polytyramine composite as a mediator-free H2O2 and nitrite biosensoropen access
- Authors
- Vilian, A. T. Ezhil; Veeramani, Vediyappan; Chen, Shen-Ming; Madhu, Rajesh; Kwak, Cheol Hwan; Huh, Yun Suk; Han, Young-Kyu
- Issue Date
- Dec-2015
- Publisher
- NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
- Citation
- SCIENTIFIC REPORTS, v.5
- Indexed
- SCIE
SCOPUS
- Journal Title
- SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
- Volume
- 5
- URI
- https://scholarworks.dongguk.edu/handle/sw.dongguk/25370
- DOI
- 10.1038/srep18390
- ISSN
- 2045-2322
- Abstract
- A novel composite film was designed for use as a highly selective mediator-free amperometric biosensor, and a method was created for accomplishing direct electrochemistry of myoglobin on a multi-walled carbon nanotube and tyramine-modified composite decorated with Au nanoparticles on a glassy carbon electrode. The ultraviolet-visible and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy results showed that myoglobin retained its native conformation in the interaction with Au-PTy-f-MWCNT. The surface coverage of Mb-heme-Fe(II)/(III) immobilized on Au-PTy-f-MWCNT and the heterogeneous electron-transfer rate constant were 2.12 x 10(-9) mol cm(-2) and 4.86 s(-1), respectively, indicating a higher loading capacity of the nanocomposite for direct electron transfer of Mb onto the electrode surface. The proposed Mb/Au-PTy-f-MWCNT biofilm exhibited excellent electrocatalytic behavior toward the reduction of H2O2 and the oxidation of nitrite with linear ranges of 2 to 5000 mu M and 1 to 8000 mu M and lower detection limits of 0.01 mu M and 0.002 mu M, respectively. An apparent Michaelis-Menten constant of 0.12 mM indicated that the Mb immobilized on the Au-PTy-f-MWCNT film retained its native activity. This biosensor can be successfully applied to detect H2O2 and nitrite in disinfectant cream, eye drops, pickle juice, and milk samples.
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Collections - College of Engineering > Department of Energy and Materials Engineering > 1. Journal Articles

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