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1.
Stable films made from ionomer poly(ester sulfonic acid) or Eastman AQ29 on pyrolytic graphite (PG) electrodes gave direct electrochemistry for incorporated enzyme horseradish peroxidase (HRP). Cyclic voltammetry of HRP-AQ films showed a pair of well-defined, nearly reversible peaks at about -0.33 V vs. SCE at pH 7.0 in blank buffers, characteristic of HRP heme Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple. The electron transfer between HRP and PG electrode was greatly facilitated in AQ films. The electrochemical parameters such as apparent heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant (k(s)) and formal potential (E(o')) were estimated by fitting the data of square-wave voltammetry (SWV) with nonlinear regression analysis. Reflectance absorption infrared (RAIR) and UV-Vis absorption spectra demonstrated that HRP retained a near native conformation in AQ films. The embedded HRP in AQ films retained the electrocatalytic activity for oxygen, nitrite and hydrogen peroxide. Possible mechanism of catalytic reduction of H(2)O(2) with HRP-AQ films was proposed.  相似文献   

2.
Electrochemical reactions of peroxide compounds (hydrogen peroxide and peracetic and perbenzoic acids) on an electrode of pyrocarbon with immobilized horseradish peroxidase (HRP) are studied. The immobilization of HRP is performed in the composition of a composite with Nafion whose structure is studied by a method of scanning tunneling microscopy. The proposed composite material provides for a high catalytic activity and stability of enzyme in the reaction of reduction of peroxide compounds. It is shown that the electrocatalytic reduction of the studied compounds on the electrode with the peroxidase–Nafion composite proceeds in conditions of direct bioelectrocatalysis. The effect of the solution pH and the concentration of substrates on the electrocatalytic activity of HRP in the composition of the composite is studied. On the basis of the obtained results a possible mechanism of the electrocatalytic reduction of peroxide compounds in the presence of HRP is suggested. The rate of a bioelectrocatalytic process is defined by the nature and concentration of the substrate as well as by the electrode potential and the solution pH.  相似文献   

3.
利用薄层光谱电化学技术研究了辣根过氧化物酶(HRP)及其化合物的氧化还原过程。指出HRP可在固体电极上进行直接电子传递,该电极反应不是酶中二硫键的还原,而是血红素辅基中心金属离子的氧化态转变。测定了HRP(Fe~(3+)/Fe~(2+))电对的标准氧化还原电位和电化学动力学参数,讨论了HRP氧化性中间物的电化学性质。  相似文献   

4.
《Electroanalysis》2005,17(10):862-868
The direct electron transfer and electrocatalysis of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) immobilized on hexagonal mesoporous silicas (HMS) matrix was studied. The interaction between HRP and HMS was examined by using Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, nitrogen adsorption isotherms and electrochemical methods. The immobilized HRP at a modified glassy carbon electrode showed a good direct electrochemical behavior, which depended on the specific properties of the HMS. Two couples of redox peaks corresponding to Fe(III) to Fe(II) conversion of the HRP intercalated in the mesopores and adsorbed on the external surface of the HMS were observed with the formal potentials of ?0.315 and ?0.161 V in 0.1 M pH 7.0 PBS, respectively. The amount of HRP intercalated in the mesopores of HMS proved to be related to the pore size. The HRP intercalated in the mesopores showed a surface controlled electrode process with a single proton transfer. The immobilized HRP displayed an excellent electrocatalytic response to the reduction of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) without the aid of an electron mediator. The HMS provided a novel matrix for protein immobilization and direct electron transfer study of the immobilized protein.  相似文献   

5.
Redox active enzymes can be adsorbed onto electrode surfaces to catalyze the interconversion of oxidized and reduced substrates in solution, driven by the supply or removal of electrons by the electrode. The catalytic current is directly proportional to the rate of enzyme turnover, and its dependence on the electrode potential can be exploited to define both the kinetics and thermodynamics of the enzyme's catalytic cycle. However, observed electrocatalytic voltammograms are often complex because the identity of the rate limiting step changes with the electrode potential and under different experimental conditions. Consequently, extracting mechanistic information requires that accurate models be constructed to deconvolute and analyze the observed behavior. Here, a basic model for catalysis by an adsorbed enzyme is described. It incorporates substrate mass transport, enzyme kinetics, and interfacial electron transport, and it accurately reproduces experimentally recorded voltammograms from the oxidation of NADH by subcomplex Ilambda (the hydrophilic subcomplex of NADH:ubiquinone oxidoreductase), under a range of conditions. Mass transport is imposed by a rotating disk electrode and described by the Levich equation. Interfacial electron transport is controlled by the electrode potential and characterized by a dispersion of rate constants, according to the model of Léger and co-workers. Here, the Michaelis-Menten equation is used for the enzyme kinetics, but our methodology can also be readily applied to derive and apply analogous equations relating to alternative enzyme mechanisms. Therefore, our results are highly relevant to the interpretation of electrocatalytic voltammograms for adsorbed enzymes in general.  相似文献   

6.
Quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics calculations were utilized to study the process of oxidation of a native substrate (ferulic acid) by the active species of horseradish peroxidase (Dunford, H. B. Heme Peroxidases; Wiley-VCH: New York, 1999), Compound I and Compound II, and the manner by which the enzyme returns to its resting state. The results match experimental findings and reveal additional novel features. The calculations demonstrate that both oxidation processes are initiated by a proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) step, in which the active species of the enzyme participate only as electron-transfer partners, while the entire proton-transfer event is being relayed from the substrate to and from the His42 residue by a water molecule (W402). The reason for the observed (Henriksen, A; Smith, A. T.; Gajhede, M. J. Biol. Chem. 1999, 274, 35005-35011) similar reactivities of Compound I and Compound II toward ferulic acid is that the reactive isomer of Compound II is the, hitherto unobserved, Por(*)(+)Fe(III)OH isomer that resembles Compound I. The PCET mechanism reveals that His42 and W402 are crucial moieties and they determine the function of the HRP enzyme and account for its ability to perform substrate oxidation (Poulos, T. L. Peroxidases and Cytochrome P450. In The Porphyrin Handbook; Kadish, K. M., Smith, K. M., Guilard, R., Eds.; Academic Press: New York, 2000; Vol. 4, pp 189). In view of the results, the possibility of manipulating substrate oxidation by magnetic fields is an intriguing possibility.  相似文献   

7.
《中国化学会会志》2018,65(9):1127-1135
In this paper, a WS2 nanosheet was modified on the surface of a carbon ionic liquid electrode (CILE), and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was further fixed on the electrode with a Nafion film. Direct electrochemistry and bioelectrocatalysis of HRP incorporated on the modified electrode were investigated in detail. On Nafion/HRP/WS2/CILE, a pair of well‐defined quasi‐reversible redox peaks appeared on the cyclic voltammogram, indicating that the presence of the WS2 nanosheet on the electrode surface could provide a specific interface with large surface area for HRP and its direct electron transfer rate was greatly enhanced. The formal potential (E0) obtained was –0.179 V, which was the typical feature of heme Fe(III)/Fe(II) in HRP. The electron transfer coefficient (α) and the heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant (ks) of HRP were calculated as 0.44 and 1.01 s–1, respectively. This HRP‐modified electrode showed excellent electrocatalytic activity for the reduction of trichloroacetic acid and NaNO2 with a wide linear range and low detection limit. Real samples were detected by this proposed method, indicating the successful fabrication of a new third‐generation electrochemical enzyme sensor utilizing the WS2 nanosheet.  相似文献   

8.
The preparation and electrocatalytic behavior of glassy carbon electrodes modified with three different cobalt porphyrin complexes were investigated. The electrocatalytic ability of the modified electrodes for the reduction of dioxygen to hydrogen peroxide and water in air‐saturated aqueous solutions was examined by cyclic voltammetry and chronoamperometry techniques. The porphyrin‐adsorbed glassy carbon electrodes possess excellent electrocatalytic abilities for dioxygen reduction with overpotential about 0.5 V lower than that at a plain glassy carbon electrode. The experimental parameters were optimized and the mechanism of the catalytic process was discussed. The possible effects of the electron‐donating properties of groups in the meso‐position of the porphyrin ring were investigated.  相似文献   

9.
利用电化学固定化方法制备了聚吡咯/辣根过氧化物酶(PP/HRP)膜电极,并研究了其电化学行为。在除氧的磷酸盐缓冲液介质中,PP/HRP电极加速H2O2的还原,归因于酶加成物的直接电子传递。探索HRP与电子传递体K4Fe(CN)6在聚吡咯(PP)膜中的同时固定化条件及其膜电极的电化学行为,实验证实,K4Fe(CN)6在酶膜中的存在使得H2O2的还原电位强烈正移,在-0.05V的工作电位下能对H2O2进行检测,相应的电极过程可用间接氧化还原催化机理解释。  相似文献   

10.
陈红  吴辉煌 《化学学报》1996,54(9):882-887
用交联法制备辣根过氧化物酶(HRP)电极, 在1,4-二氧六环介质中研究其电化学行为。实验表明, 固定化的HRP在有机相中仍保持活性并可与电极进行直接电子传递, 因而能在没有其它电子传递体存在的条件下催化H~2O~2的电化学还原反应。当亚铁氰化物与酶共修饰至电极上之后, 它起着电子传递体的作用, 使HRP电极的性能大为改善。根据不同条件下得到的动力学参数, 讨论了影响酶电极性能的因素。  相似文献   

11.
Qing Lu 《Talanta》2010,82(4):1344-248
A novel electrochemical sensing system for direct electrochemistry-based hydrogen peroxide biosensor was developed that relied on the virtues of excellent biocompatibility, conductivity and high sensitivity to the local perturbations of single-layer graphene nanoplatelet (SLGnP). To demonstrate the concept, the horseradish peroxidase (HRP) enzyme was selected as a model to form the SLGnP-TPA (tetrasodium 1,3,6,8-pyrenetetrasulfonic acid)-HRP composite film. The single-layer graphene composite film displayed a pair of well-defined and good reversible cyclic voltammetric peak for Fe(III)/Fe(II) redox couple of HRP, reflecting the enhancement for the direct electron transfer between the enzyme and the electrode surface. Analysis using electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) revealed that electrostatic attractions existed between graphene monolayers and enzyme molecules. The intimate graphene and enzyme interaction was also observed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), which resulted in the special properties of the composite film. Ultraviolet visible spectroscopy (UV-vis) indicated the enzyme in the composite film retained its secondary structure similar to the native state. The composite film demonstrated excellent electrochemical responses for the electrocatalytic reduction of hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), thus suggesting its great potential applications in direct electrochemistry-based biosensors.  相似文献   

12.
Xenobiotic metabolizing heme enzymes are thought to take a crucial part in the activation of a variety of carcinogens, including nitro compounds, through catalytic electron-transfer reactions, especially under anaerobic conditions. Myoglobin (Mb), as a model heme enzyme, is found to act as an efficient electrocatalyst for the reduction of nitromethane in thin surfactant films on pyrolytic graphite electrodes. The electrocatalytic process is characterized by cyclic voltammetry. The Mb-Fe(II)-nitrosomethane complex, a possible intermediate in the catalysis, is characterized spectroscopically in the surfactant film on indium tin oxide electrodes. Bulk electrolysis indicates the formation of mainly methylhydroxylamine as an end aqueous product. A rationale for the catalysis invokes the highly reduced Fe(I) state of myoglobin in surfactant film; the latter engages in efficient inner-sphere electron transfers to the nitro compound coupled to proton transfers.  相似文献   

13.
Immobilization of protein molecules is a fundamental problem for scanning tunnelling microscopy (STM) measurements with high resolution. In this paper, an electrochemical method has been proved to be an effective way to fix native horseradish peroxidase (HRP) as well as inactivated HRP from electrolyte onto a highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) surface. This preparation is suitable for both ex situ and in situ electrochemical STM (ECSTM) measurements. In situ STM has been successfully employed to observe totally different structures of HRP in three typical cases: (1) in situ ECSTM reveals an oval-shaped pattern for a single molecule in neutral buffer solution, which is in good agreement with the dimension determined as 6.2×4.3×1.2. nm3 by ex situ STM for native HRP; (2) in situ ECSTM shows that the adsorbed HRP molecules on HOPG in a denatured environment exhibit swelling globes at the beginning and then change into a V-shaped pattern after 30 min; (3) in situ ECSTM reveals a black hole in every ellipsoidal sphere for inactivated HRP in strong alkali solution. The cyclic voltammetry results indicate that the absorbed native HRP can directly catalyse the reduction of hydrogen peroxide, demonstrating that a direct electron transfer reduction occurred between the enzyme and HOPG electrode, whereas the corresponding cyclic voltammograms for denatured HRP and inactivated HRP adsorbed on HOPG electrodes indicate a lack of ability to catalyse H2O2 reduction, which confirms that the HRP molecules lost their biological activity. Obviously, electrochemical results powerfully support in situ STM observations.  相似文献   

14.
A third-generation hydrogen peroxide biosensor was prepared by immobilizing horseradish peroxidase (HRP) on a gold electrode modified with silver nanoparticles. A freshly-cleaned gold electrode was first immersed in a cysteamine–ethanol solution, and then silver nanoparticles were immobilized on the cysteamine monolayer, and finally HRP was adsorbed onto the surfaces of the silver nanoparticles. This self-assemble process was examined via atomic force microscopy (AFM). The immobilized horseradish peroxidase exhibited an excellent electrocatalytic response toward the reduction of hydrogen peroxide. The linear range of the biosensor was 3.3 M to 9.4 mM, and the detection limit was estimated to be 0.78 M. Moreover, the biosensor exhibited a fast response, high sensitivity, good reproducibility, and long-term stability.  相似文献   

15.
Out of several tries, biotinylation of the electrode surface by means of a sacrificial biotinylated immunoglobulin, followed by the anchoring of an avidin-enzyme conjugate appears as the best procedure for depositing a horseradish peroxidase (HRP) monolayer onto an electrode surface, allowing a high-yield immobilization of the enzyme within a stable and highly catalytic coating. Cyclic voltammetry is an efficient means for analyzing the catalytic reduction of H(2)O(2) at such HRP monolayer electrodes in the presence of [Os(III)(bpy)(2)pyCl](2+) (with bpy = bipyridine and py = pyridine) as a one-electron reversible cosubstrate. The odd shapes of current-potential responses, unusual bell-shaped variation of the peak or plateau current with the substrate concentration, hysteresis and trace crossing phenomena, and dependence or lack of dependence with the scan rate, can all be explained and quantitatively analyzed in the framework of the same catalysis/inhibition mechanism as previously demonstrated for homogeneous systems, taking substrate and cosubstrate mass transport of into account. According to H(2)O(2) concentration, limiting-behavior analyses based on the dominant factors or complete numerical simulation were used in the treatment of experimental data. The kinetic characteristics derived from these quantitative treatments implemented by the determination of the amount of enzyme deposited by the newly developed droplet depletion method allowed a comparison with homogeneous characteristics to be drawn. It shows that HRP remains nearly fully active once anchored on the electrode surface through the avidin-biotin linkage. On the basis of this full mechanistic and kinetic characterization, the analytical performances in H(2)O(2) detection and amperometric immunosensor applications are finally discussed.  相似文献   

16.
In this work, titanate nanotubes (TNTs), polyaniline (PANI) and gold nanoparticles (GNPs) were assembled to form a ternary composite, which was then applied on an electrode as a scaffold of an electrochemical enzyme biosensor. The scaffold was constructed by oxidatively polymerising aniline to produce an emeraldine salt of PANI on TNTs, followed by gold nanoparticle deposition. A novel aspect of this scaffold lies in the use of the emeraldine salt of PANI as a molecular wire between TNTs and GNPs. Using horseradish peroxidase (HRP) as a model enzyme, voltammetric results demonstrated that direct electron transfer of HRP was achieved at both TNT-PANI and TNT-PANI-GNP-modified electrodes. More significantly, the catalytic reduction current of H2O2 by HRP was ∼75% enhanced at the TNT-PANI-GNP-modified electrode, compared to that at the TNT-PANI-modified electrode. The heterogeneous electron transfer rate constant of HRP was found to be ∼3 times larger at the TNT-PANI-GNP-modified electrode than that at the TNT-PANI-modified electrode. Based on chronoamperometric detection of H2O2, a linear range from 1 to 1200 μM, a sensitivity of 22.7 μA mM−1 and a detection limit of 0.13 μM were obtained at the TNT-PANI-GNP-modified electrode. The performance of the biosensor can be ascribed to the superior synergistic properties of the ternary composite.  相似文献   

17.
Heme peroxidase are ubiquitous enzymes catalyzing the oxidation of a broad range of substrates by hydrogen peroxide. In this paper the bioelectrochemical characterization of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and soybean peroxidase (SBP), belonging to class III of the plant peroxidase superfamily, was studied. The homogeneous reactions between peroxidases and some common redox mediators in the presence of hydrogen peroxide have been carried out by cyclic voltammetry. The electrochemical characterization of the reactions involving enzyme, substrate and mediators concentrations allowed us to calculate the kinetic parameters for the substrate–enzyme reaction (KMS) and for the redox mediator–enzyme reaction (KMM). A full characterization of the direct electron transfer kinetic parameters between the electrode and enzyme active site was also performed by opportunely modeling data obtained from cyclic voltammetry and square wave voltammetry experiments. The experimental data obtained with immobilized peroxidases show enhanced direct electron transfer and excellent electrocatalytical performance for H2O2. Despite the structural similarities and common catalytic cycle, HRP and SBP exhibit differences in their substrate affinity and catalytic efficiency. Basing on our results, it can be concluded that peroxidase from soybean represents an interesting alternative to the classical and largely employed one obtained from horseradish as biorecognition element of electrochemical mediated biosensors.  相似文献   

18.
A new electrochemical immunosensing protocol for sensitive detection of alpha‐fetoprotein (AFP, as a model) in human serum was developed by means of immobilization of horseradish peroxidase‐anti‐AFP conjugates (HRP‐anti‐AFP) onto graphene and nanogold‐functionalized biomimetic interfaces. The low‐toxic and high‐conductive graphene complex provided a large capacity for nanoparticulate immobilization and a facile pathway for electron transfer. With a one‐step immunoassay format, the antigen‐antibody complex was formed between the immobilized HRP‐anti‐AFP on the electrode and AFP in the sample. The formed immunocomplex was coated on the electrode surface, inhibited partly the active center of HRP, and decreased the catalytic reduction of HRP toward the enzyme substrate of H2O2. Under optimal conditions, the decrease of reduction currents was proportional to AFP concentration, and the dynamic range was 1.0–10 ng/mL with a relative‐low detection limit (LOD) of 0.7 ng/mL AFP. Intra‐ and inter‐assay coefficients of variation (CVs) were less than 10 %. The assay was evaluated for clinical human serum samples, including 8 (possible) patients with hepatocarcinoma and 3 normal human sera. Correct identification of negative/positive samples and perfect accordance with results from Elecsys 2010 Electrochemiluminescent Automatic Analyzer as a reference was obtained. Importantly, the graphene and nanogold‐based sensor provided a promising platform for the detection of other biocompounds, and could be further applied for development of other potential electrochemical bio/chemosensors.  相似文献   

19.
Mathebe NG  Morrin A  Iwuoha EI 《Talanta》2004,64(1):115-120
An amperometric biosensor was prepared by in situ deposition of horseradish peroxidase (HRP) enzyme on a polyaniline (PANI)-doped platinum disk electrode. The PANI film was electrochemically deposited on the electrode at 100 mV s−1/Ag-AgCl. Cyclic voltammetric characterization of the PANI film in 1 M HCl showed two distinct redox peaks, which prove that the PANI film was electroactive and exhibited fast reversible electrochemistry. The surface concentration and film thickness of the adsorbed electroactive species was estimated to be 1.85×10−7 mol cm−2 and approximately 16 nm, respectively. HRP was electrostatically immobilized onto the surface of the PANI film, and voltammetry was used to monitor the electrocatalytic reduction of hydrogen peroxide under diffusion-controlled conditions. Linear responses over the concentration range 2.5×10−4 to 5×10−3 M were observed. Spectroelectrochemistry was used to monitor the changes in UV-vis properties of HRP, before and after the catalysis of H2O2. The biosensor surface morphology was characterized by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) using PANI-doped screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCEs) in the presence and absence of (i) peroxidase and (ii) peroxide. The SEM images showed clear modifications of the conducting film surface structure when doped with HRP, as well as the effect of hydrogen peroxide on the morphology of biosensor.  相似文献   

20.
Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) was immobilized into a new type of sol–gel-derived nano-sized tin oxide/gelatin composite film (SnO2 composite film) using a sol–gel film/enzyme/sol–gel film “sandwich” configuration. Direct electrochemistry and electrocatalysis of HRP incorporated into the composite films were investigated. HRP/SnO2 composite film exhibited a pair of stable and quasi-reversible cyclic voltammetric peaks for the HRP Fe(III)/HRP Fe(II) redox couple with a formal potential of about −0.25 V (vs. SCE) in a pH 6.0 phosphate buffer solution. The electron transfer between the enzyme and the underlying electrode was greatly enhanced in the microenvironment with nano-SnO2 particles and nanoporous structures. Morphologies and microstructures of the composite films and HRP/composite films were characterized with TEM, AFM. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) was also used to feature the HRP incorporated into composite films. FTIR and UV–Vis spectroscopy demonstrated that HRP in the composite film could retain its native secondary structure. With the advantages of organic–inorganic hybrid materials, the HRP/SnO2 composite film modified electrode displayed good stability and electrocatalytic activity to the reduction of H2O2, The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant was estimated to be 0.345 mM, indicating a high affinity of HRP entrapped into the composite film toward H2O2.  相似文献   

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