Superoxide dismutase based biosensor for the electrochemical determination of epinephrine

 

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores: Barquero Quirós, Miriam, Cunha Silva, Hugo, Arcos Martínez, María Julia
Formato: artículo original
Fecha de Publicación:2018
Descripción:New amperometric biosensor for epinephrine was developed, using a screen printed carbon electrode with tetrathiafulvalene (5% v/w) incorporated into carbon ink (SPCTTFE). Electrodic surface was modified with nanoparticles of Au, Pt, Pd and Rh deposited on SPCTTFE by cyclic voltammetry. When using Pd nanoparticles, slope of EPI calibration curves was higher than the performed with the others NPs. The electrodeposited nanoparticles were evaluated with atomic force microscopy and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy was used to characterize electrode process. The developed superoxide dismutase-based biosensor was characterized by: limit of detection of 5.3 × 10-6 M (n=4), limit of quantification of 17.5 × 10-6 M (n=4), reproducibility with RSD of 2.8% (n=5), repeatability with RSD of 0.97% (n=3), accuracy was 102.8% with RSD of 4.3% (n=5). Linearity was obtained from 17.0 × 10-5 M to 8.59 × 10-4M. Interference study performed adding ascorbic acid and uric acid exhibits that the peak potential of both species are higher than the chosen for epinephrine analysis. Therefore developed biosensor and described in this paper, has been successfully applied to the determination of epinephrine in human gamma globulin and pharmaceutical samples. Developed biosensor offers easy assembly, excellent linearity and good performance parameters.
País:Kérwá
Institución:Universidad de Costa Rica
Repositorio:Kérwá
OAI Identifier:oai:kerwa.ucr.ac.cr:10669/80689
Acceso en línea:https://www.tsijournals.com/abstract/superoxide-dismutase-based-biosensor-for-the-electrochemical-determination-of-epinephrine-13841.html
https://hdl.handle.net/10669/80689
Palabra clave:Epinephrine
Superoxide dismutase enzyme
Screen-printed electrodes
Nanoparticles
Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy
Atomic force microscopy
Biosensor