Evaluation of different functional groups for covalent immobilization of enzymes in the development of biosensors with oxygen optical transduction
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Ramón Márquez, María Teresa; Medina Castillo, Antonio Luis; Fernández Sánchez, Jorge Fernando; Fernández Gutiérrez, AlbertoEditorial
Royal Society of Chemistry
Fecha
2015-04-09Referencia bibliográfica
Ramón Gutiérrez, T. et. al. Anal. Methods, 2015, 7, 2943. [https://doi.org/10.1039/C5AY00103J]
Patrocinador
Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (CTQ2011- 25316, Ramon-Marquez's grant reference AP2012-0944 and Medina-Castillo's Torres Quevedo contract reference PTQ-11- 04904); People Programme (Marie Curie Actions, Multi- ITN) of the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme (project EUROMBR grant agreement no. 608104)Resumen
Four different types of polymeric particles with different functional groups on their surface have
been evaluated to develop biosensors using glucose oxidase as a model enzyme. Direct covalent
immobilization was achieved on particles functionalized with chloride, epoxy and vinyl groups via the
reactive functional groups on the surface, whereas particles functionalized with carboxylic groups, used
as reference materials, were pre-activated with carbodiimide. Immobilization was successfully performed
under very mild conditions (20 C, pH 8.0). In order to determine the advantages and disadvantages of
each functional group, both the amounts of immobilized enzymes and their relative activities were fully
investigated. In order to demonstrate their applicability on the design on biosensing with oxygen optical
transduction, the functionalized particles were co-immobilized in gold chips with oxygen sensing
particles (PSMA–PtTFPP) using electrophoretic deposition and characterised for glucose determination in
solution.