| Literature DB >> 18970759 |
Eloy Salinas1, Valeria Rivero, Angel A J Torriero, Delia Benuzzi, María I Sanz, Julio Raba.
Abstract
Fabrication of an amperometric-rotating biosensor for the enzymatic determination of cholesterol is reported. The assay utilizes a combination of three enzymes: cholesterol esterase (ChE), cholesterol oxidase (ChOx) and peroxidase (HRP); which were co-immobilizing on a rotatory disk. The method is developed by the use of a glassy carbon electrode as detector versus Ag/AgCl/3M NaCl in conjunction with a soluble-redox mediator 4-tert-butylcatechol (TBC). ChE converts esterified cholesterol to free cholesterol, which is then oxidized by ChOx with hydrogen peroxide as product. TBC is converted to 4-tert-butylbenzoquinone (TBB) by hydrogen peroxide, catalyzed by HRP, and the glassy carbon electrode responds to the TBB concentration. The system has integrated a micro packed-column with immobilized ascorbate oxidase (AAOx) that works as prereactor to eliminate l-ascorbic acid (AA) interference. This method could be used to determine total cholesterol concentration in the range 1.2muM-1mM (r=0.999). A fast response time of 2min has been observed with this amperometric-rotating biosensor. Lifetime is up to 25 days of use. The calculated detection limits was 11.9nM. Reproducibility assays were made using repetitive standards solutions (n=5) and the percentage standard error was less than 4%.Entities:
Year: 2006 PMID: 18970759 DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2006.02.043
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Talanta ISSN: 0039-9140 Impact factor: 6.057