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Low potential stable glucose detection at dendrimers modified polyaniline nanotubes

Abstract

The utilization of nanostructured materials for development of biosensors is a growing field in medical diagnostics. In this work a glucose biosensor based on bioactive polyglycerol (PGLD) and chitosan dendrimers (CHD) was developed. PGLD and CHD were bioconjugated with the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx) to obtain dendrimers with glucose sensing properties. Polyaniline nanotubes (PANINT´s) were used as electron mediator due to their high ability to promote electron-transfer reactions involving GOx. The PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx were entrapped in PANINT´s during template electrochemical polymerization of aniline. The prepared PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors exhibit a strong and stable amperometric response to glucose even at a low potential of +100 mV. The based PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors showed a good performance in glucose concentrations range in human blood. A comparison of the sensitivities to glucose showed that both biosensors have a linearity range between 0.02 and 10 mM, though PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s is more sensitive (10.41 vs. 7.04 nA.mM-1). The difference in the biosensor behavior and the high sensitivity of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s may be due to the specific organization of GOx layer at surface of the modifier macromolecule PGLD and their distribution in PANINT´s. The enzyme affinity for the substrate, K Mapp remains quite good after GOx immobilization on PGLD and CHD dendrimers and entrapment of the bioconjugates in PANINT´s.

polyglycerol dendrimers; chitosan dendrimers; polyaniline nanotubes; glucose biosensor


REGULAR ARTICLES

Low potential stable glucose detection at dendrimers modified polyaniline nanotubes

Alessandra Nogueira Santos; Demétrio Artur Werner Soares; Alvaro Antonio Alencar de Queiroz* * e-mail: alencar@unifei.edu.br, alvaro.alencar@pq.cnpq.br

Departamento de Física e Química, Universidade Federal de Itajubá – UNIFEI, Av. BPS, 1303, 37500-903 Itajubá, MG, Brazil

ABSTRACT

The utilization of nanostructured materials for development of biosensors is a growing field in medical diagnostics. In this work a glucose biosensor based on bioactive polyglycerol (PGLD) and chitosan dendrimers (CHD) was developed. PGLD and CHD were bioconjugated with the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx) to obtain dendrimers with glucose sensing properties. Polyaniline nanotubes (PANINT´s) were used as electron mediator due to their high ability to promote electron-transfer reactions involving GOx. The PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx were entrapped in PANINT´s during template electrochemical polymerization of aniline. The prepared PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors exhibit a strong and stable amperometric response to glucose even at a low potential of +100 mV. The based PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors showed a good performance in glucose concentrations range in human blood. A comparison of the sensitivities to glucose showed that both biosensors have a linearity range between 0.02 and 10 mM, though PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s is more sensitive (10.41 vs. 7.04 nA.mM–1). The difference in the biosensor behavior and the high sensitivity of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s may be due to the specific organization of GOx layer at surface of the modifier macromolecule PGLD and their distribution in PANINT´s. The enzyme affinity for the substrate, KMapp remains quite good after GOx immobilization on PGLD and CHD dendrimers and entrapment of the bioconjugates in PANINT´s.

Keywords: polyglycerol dendrimers, chitosan dendrimers, polyaniline nanotubes, glucose biosensor

1. Introduction

The present century is marked by the nanotechnology where researchers have developed this technology to observe and manipulate atoms directly as result of the advances from microscopy, materials science, top-down and bottom-up synthesis and the relationship between classical and quantum physics1.

Today, dendrimers represents the most important and largest family of nanochemistry being used in medical technology2. The intrinsic properties of dendrimers like as monodispersity, highly functional groups at macromolecule periphery and good biocompatible properties of these nano-objects has led to their widespread use in a variety of applications in medicine and biotechnology3.

Recently, poly (amidoamine) (PAMAM) dendrimers have been synthesized with a variety of core materials, branching units and surface modifications. PAMAM dendrimers and their hybrid nanocomposites has been used with great success for the construction of highly sensitive and stable amperometric glucose biosensor demonstrating the high potential of these nano-particles as platform for the design of clinical biosensors for glucose monitoring4. However, while development of PAMAM dendrimer has tremendous technological potential, these materials, have been shown to exhibit significantly toxicity to mammalian cells5.

Recently, the good biocompatibility properties of polyglycerol (PGLD) and chitosan (ChD) dendrimers have received our attention for applications in medicine6-7. PGLD and CHD have shown to be a good matrix for the enzyme immobilization. Enzyme immobilization onto electrode surface is a crucial step in fabrication of amperometric bosensors.

In this work the enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx) was immobilized onto polyglycerol (PGLD) and chitosan dendrimers (CHD) (Figure 1). GOx has been chosen as a model enzyme in this study to explore the applicability of the PGLD and CHD as a matrix for enzymes of clinical interests. Glucose oxidase (GOx) is widely used in biosensors design for the estimation of the metabolite glucose in whole blood. The estimation of metabolites such as glucose in whole blood is of central importance in the modern therapy for diabetes mellitus8.


Glucose oxidase (β-D-glucose:oxygen 1-oxidoreductase, EC1.1.3.4) is an enzyme that catalyses the oxidation of β-D-glucose to D-glucono-1,5-lactone and hydrogen peroxide, using molecular oxygen as the electron acceptor in according to the reaction:(Chart 1)


The generated hydrogen peroxide may be detected amperometrically at the enzyme electrode making use of mediators to shuttle electrons from the enzyme to the electrode surface.

The usefulness of CHD and PGLD dendrimers as the support for binding the GOx can be ascribed to: i) high functionality at macromolecule periphery that facilitates the enzyme immobilization procedure, ii) low cost and iii) good biocompatibility properties. The similarity in length scales and supramolecular structure between PGLD/CHD dendrimers and enzymes suggests interactions at GOx-dendrimer interface that may be favorable for biosensor electrode applications. Additionally, the bioconjugated PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx until this moment were not well characterized electrochemically in literature as glucose biosensor, offering new directions in biosensor development. Enzyme entrapment, electron mediation and nano-biosensor fabrication are some of the possibilities that PGLD and CHD offer to the biosensing devices.

The electrical communication between redox centers of GOx and surface electrode was established through poly(aniline) nanotubes (PANINT´s) for the transport of electrical charge. This approach has received particular attention for the construction of third generation glucose biosensors8. PANINT´s possess many unique properties such as high electrocatalytic effect, fast electron transfer, environmental stability and ability to promote fast electron-transfer reactions involving the enzyme GOx9.

The kinetic parameters of PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s such as response time, sensitivity, detection limit, linear range and enzyme activity were determined and Michaelis–Menten kinetics parameters were also evaluated. The behaviors of the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx entrapped in PANINT´s matrix were also studied and compared with that of the free PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx. Such information is believed to be of practical importance for the rational design of the dendrimers as carriers of biomacromolecules in high-throughput clinical assays.

2. Experimental

2.1. Dendrimer synthesis

Detailed procedures for the synthesis and characterization of CHD and PGLD dendrimers are reported in other publications originated from our researcher group6-7. Briefly, the dendronized chitosan (CHD) was synthesized by repeating the Michael addition of methacrylic acid (10 mM, Sigma-Aldrich) to amino groups of chitosan (100 mM, Sigma-Aldrich) followed by the amidation of terminal ester groups by ethylene diamine (2 mM). The dendronized chitosan (CHD) was purified by precipitation in methanol at room temperature (25 °C). The fourth generation polyglycerol dendrimer (PGLD) was prepared by the slow addition of glycidol to a solution containing a partially deprotonated polyol-core at 120 °C in argon atmosphere for 24 hours. Both, CHD and PGLD dendrimers were dialyzed and lyophilized before enzyme immobilization.

2.2. Covalent immobilization of glucose oxidase on the CHD and PGLD dendrimers

The enzyme glucose oxidase (GOx E.C.1.1.3.4, 148 U.mg–1, Sigma-Aldrich) was chemically immobilized onto CHD and PGLD dendrimer surfaces through a condensation reaction using activation of the -OH (PGLD) or -NH2 (CHD) dendrimers groups by a cyanylating reaction to the hydroxyl groups on dendrimer surface via amide bond using 1-Cyano-4-(dimethylamino)-pyridinium tetrafluoroborate (CDAP)10. Leaving the activated CHD and PGLD dendrimers in the GOx solutions (3 mg.mL–1) at 4 °C overnight completed the enzyme immobilization. The bioconjugates CHD-GOx and PGLD-GOx were purified by dialysis and lyophilized. The amount of immobilized GOx was calculated by measuring the concentration of the protein in the supernatant and then subtracting from the total free enzyme amount using the classic Bradford methodology11.

2.3. Preparation of enzyme electrode

The glucose biosensing electrodes based on the CHD-GOx and PGLD-GOx was prepared by immobilizing the bioconjugates on protonated polyaniline nanotubes (PANINT´s) polarographicaly deposited at thin aluminum films (Alcoa, 99.99%, 30.0 mm, 2 V) in solution containing aniline (Sigma-Aldrich, 99.0%, 2.2 µM) and H2SO4 (Merck, 1 M) at room temperature (27 °C) in according to our recent works12.

Electrochemical polymerization solution consisted of redistilled aniline (0.1 M), the bionjugated dendrimer (4.2 U.mL-1) and p-toluene sulphonate (1 M) in sodium phosphate buffer saline (NaPBS) (0.1 M, NaH2PO4/Na2HPO4, 0.05 mol.L–1 NaCl, pH 7.4) as electrolyte. The nanotubes growth was terminated in the potential cycle at –100 mV vs. a silver calomelan electrode (Ag/AgCl, SCE), so that the PANINT´s were in the reduced state and to achieve an estimated charge loading of 30 mC. The electrodes were thoroughly washed with NaPBS and stored in the buffer solution at room temperature (25 °C) for 24 hours to remove any excess on residual monomer and GOx weakly bound to the PANINT´s. After the electrochemical entrapment of the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx within PANINT´s, the bioactivities of the electrodes were measured amperometrically.

2.4. Characterization of the enzyme electrode

The morphologies of the gold-coated PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors surfaces were analyzed using scanning electron microscopy (SEM). SEM measurements were conducted on a Phillips XL30 instrument using an accelerating voltage of 20 kV.

The sensitivity of the biosensor to glucose was assayed by measuring the current response. The principle of the determination of the current response is based on the formation of hydrogen peroxide during the GOx-catalyzed reaction, which is as follows: (Equation 1)

The H2O2 production may be followed using a platinum working electrode (anode) generally polarized at + 700 mV against an Ag/AgCl (SCE) reference electrode. At this potential the hydrogen peroxide was oxidized according to the reaction: (Equation 2)

The electric current produced is proportional to the glucose concentration13.

The cell used to determine the response current consisted of PANINT´s/CHD-GOx or PANINT´s/PGLD-GOx, a platinum electrode, and a SCE electrode in NaPBS buffer. The background current, Ib, of the enzyme electrode, which was allowed to decay to a steady state, was first determined at a given potential, 37 °C and pH value of 7.4. Then, the enzyme electrode was moved immediately into a separate NaPBS containing a known concentration of glucose to measure the current response. The latter determination was carried out at the same potential, 37 °C and pH of 7.4, as those of determination of the background current. The steady state current IS for the determination of glucose on the current-time curve was taken as the measured value. Therefore, the response current I of the enzyme electrode is equal to the difference between the measured current Ib and IS, i.e., I = IS – Ib. This procedure was important to eliminate the effects of potential, pH and temperature on the PANINT´s conductivity between two current measurements14.

The measurements of the current flow across the biosensors were performed with a programmable electrometer (Keithley® model 237). The working electrodes were the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s or CHD-GOx/PANINT´s, while the SCE electrode was used as reference.

2.5. Statistical analysis

The repeatability of the biosensors responses were investigated under each optimized experimental conditions. In each series of five electrodes prepared, the relative standard deviations were obtained as the mean of five independent measurements for the current response of both, PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors.

3. Results and Discussion

Since the carbon nanotubes synthesis at past century, the studies of this one-dimensional nanomaterial have provided a fruitful ground of many exciting applications in clinical chemistry15. Current clinical research promises new ways to diagnose disease, to deliver specific therapy, and to monitor the effects acutely and non-invasively16.

Figure 2 shows the SEM micrograph of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s deposited at Al electrodes. The SEM microstructure analysis demonstrates the nanotubes formation obtained as a nucleation of aniline molecules into the formed aluminum pores when the oxidation process takes place. The mechanism of the aniline polymerization appears to proceeds with increment of new aniline molecules that can interact with each other, through the amine and iminium nitrogen interaction forming at the same time fibrous polyaniline nanostructures (PANINT´s). In this sense, electrodes with glucose sensing properties were done by entrapment of the bioconjugates PGLD-GOx or CHD-GOx during the polyaniline nanotubes (PANINT´s) growth on metallic surface.


The dendrimer topology is an important molecular parameter that determines their physical properties and applications. To control dendrimer topology and accurately architecture is currently a central theme in polymer science with the aim to prepare macromolecules with new properties17.

The main problem to solve in the immobilization of enzymes to biosensors fabrication concerns the support selection. In this sense, a number of criteria such as microbial resistance, thermal stability, chemical inertia and functional groups on the surface of the support must be considered in the use of dendrimers for the development of biosensors18.

In this work it was studied the properties of the glucose biosensors that depend on the dendrimer topology. The basic parameters that are highly important in characterizing the properties of the biosensors are response time, sensitivity, linear range and Michaelis-Menten constant (KM).

The detection of glucose was performed amperometrically, based on measurement of the current of electrons flowing from bioconjugated dendrimer and PANINT´s due to anodic degradation of hydrogen peroxide19.

The change in the response current of the PGLD and CHD biosensors with the potential are shown in Figure 3. The response current increases from 100 to 300 mV, and then increases more slowly with further increasing potential. The maximum current occurs at 400 mV for both PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx biosensors, respectively.


The current-time relationships when the potential of the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx biosensors at 300 mV are shown in Figure 4. It was found that the response current of the enzyme electrode easily reaches to steady state. From the results in Figure 4 the current saturation peak for PGLD-GOx biosensor is meaningfully higher than CHD-GOx. The decay in response current observed in CHD-GOx biosensor may be due to the inhibition of GOx activity by the amino groups at CHD periphery. The periphery of CHD dendritic unit is filled with primary amine groups, while all the branching points, in the interior of the dendrimer, are occupied by tertiary amine. It is possible that the primary amino functions present in the periphery of the dendritic units may also participate through hydrogen bonds with the catalytic site of GOx resulting in a decrease of the bioactivity of the CHD biosensor.


The relationship between response current and glucose concentration in NaPBS buffer is shown in Figure 5. A characteristic hyperbolic Michaelis-Menten kinetics mechanism may be observed. It was found that, current increases with increasing glucose concentration in the range 1-50 mM. Considering that the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx are uniformly distributed throughout the PANINT´s, the reaction appears to be predominantly in the surface of the biosensors in the lower glucose concentration. However, the reaction on the surface of the electrodes and the diffusion occurring simultaneously at higher concentrations delays the response time. Thus, the increased glucose concentrations also increased the response current and finally reached to steady state value.


The evaluations of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s kinetics were determined by the analysis of the Michaelis-Menten equation. The apparent Michaelis-Menten constant (KMapp), which gives an indication of the enzyme-substrate kinetics can be calculated from the linearized electrochemical Michaelis-Menten equation form, denominated Lineweaver-Burk Equation (3)[20]:

The parameter KMapp describes the enzymatic activity of GOx. A smaller KMapp value indicates a more efficient GOx reaction. The KMapp is related to the concentration of the substrate reaching the maximum rate of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. Thus, the smaller KMapp value, the lower is the substrate concentration for reaching the maximum value of the enzyme-catalyzed reaction. In this study, the KMapp values for the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx were determined by using Lineweaver-Burk plot of the measured current-concentration data.

The relationship between I-1 against [glucose]-1 in 0.1 M NaPBS pH 7.4 for the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx dendrimers are shown in Figure 6. The maximum current response IMax and the apparent Michaelis-Menten constant KMapp were calculated from the intercept and slope of the straight line. The maximum current responses for the bioconjugates CHD-GOx and PGLD-GOx immobilized in PANINT´s were 0.154 and 0.211 µA, respectively. The KMapp were 6.71 and 5.75 mM for the biosensors based on CHD-GOx and PGLD-GOx, respectively. The kinetic parameters, KMapp of the free bioconjugates PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx were 7.5 ± 0.82 mM and 6.3 ± 0.58 mM at constant temperature (37 °C) and pH 7.4 (NaPBS), respectively. The PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx entrapped in PANINT´s exhibited lower KMapp values that of the free bioconjugates. The smaller KMapp exhibited by the CHD-GOx and PGLD-GOx entrapped in PANINT´s indicate that the electron mediator matrix did not cause any significant hindrance of the GOx towards its substrate.


For the fabrication of biosensors, different materials and methods of immobilization of enzymes have been used and these could result in different conformational changes in the enzyme structures given that the enzyme kinetics is environment sensitive. However, it is very difficult to compare one biosensor to others because the performance of the biosensor is greatly dependent on the applied potential, GOx immobilization method, the electrode material and its surface area. The KMapp of PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx were not affected rather prominently by the entrapment of bioconjugates in PANINT´s and the values obtained for the Michaelis-Menten constant of the enzymes electrodes in this work are comparable to most of glucose biosensors based on polyaniline nanofibers21. Additionally, the similarity in KMapp for PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx indicate that both biosensors, PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOX/PANINT´s are operating in enzyme kinetic controlled mode since the diffusion limitations in this case appear to be minimal22.

Figure 7 shows the calibration curves of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s. The linear range scans the glucose concentration from 0.02 to 10 mM. The calibration curves were linear with glucose concentration and sensitivities of 10.41 nA.mM–1 for PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and 7.04 nA.mM–1 for CHD-GOx/PANINT´s were obtained. The results showed that the sensitivity of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensor to glucose (10.41 nA.mM–1) is 1.5 larger than that of the CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensor at working potential of 300 mV. This indicated that the structure of PGLD-GOx makes oxygen and glucose more easily accessible to the active site of enzyme than CHD-GOx structure. The sensitivity of PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s appears to be comparable to sensitivity of those glucose biosensors that make use nanostructured polyaniline as electron mediator21-23.


The stability of glucose biosensors is also a very important factor, which influence the application and detecting capacity of the biosensor. In order to study the stability and reproductively of the PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors were tested in the presence of 2 mM glucose solution for 10 days (Figure 8). The biosensors were removed from a 4 °C refrigerator and put in the reaction cell to perform the experiment each day, and then dried and stored at 4 °C again after each experiment was completed.

Figure 8

4. Conclusions

This study showed that PGLD and CHD dendrimers could be used successfully as nanoplatforms for the immobilization of GOx. PANINT´s can be efficiently used as electron mediators in PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx biosensors. The measurements of Michaelis-Menten kinetics indicated that PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s has a better performance than CHD-GOx/PANINT´s probably due to the more uniformly dispersion of PGLD-GOx in the PANINT´s. However, both PGLD-GOx/PANINT´s and CHD-GOx/PANINT´s biosensors exhibits improved analytical performance with respect to their glucose sensing properties.

The use of the PGLD-GOx and CHD-GOx for construction of glucose biosensors may facilitate the fabrication of biosensors at nanoscale, promoting the integration of labile biological components into high throughput testing instruments and at same time biocompatible biosensors for implantation. These glucose biosensor materials are expected to have superior biocompatibility, which can be revealed by further studies.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported in part by a grant from the Finep, CNPq, Capes and Fapemig.

Received: December 11, 2007;

Revised: January 12, 2010

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  • Publication Dates

    • Publication in this collection
      13 Apr 2010
    • Date of issue
      Mar 2010

    History

    • Received
      11 Dec 2007
    • Accepted
      12 Jan 2010
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