| Literature DB >> 21711937 |
Sabrina S Sam1, Jean-Noël Jn Chazalviel, Anne Chantal Ac Gouget-Laemmel, François F Ozanam, Arnaud A Etcheberry, Nour-Eddine N Gabouze.
Abstract
In this work, a Glycyl-Histidyl-Glycyl-Histidine (GlyHisGlyHis) peptide is covalently anchored to the porous silicon PSi surface using a multi-step reaction scheme compatible with the mild conditions required for preserving the probe activity. In a first step, alkene precursors are grafted onto the hydrogenated PSi surface using the hydrosilylation route, allowing for the formation of a carboxyl-terminated monolayer which is activated by reaction with N-hydroxysuccinimide in the presence of a peptide-coupling carbodiimide N-ethyl-N'-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-carbodiimide and subsequently reacted with the amino linker of the peptide to form a covalent amide bond. Infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR) and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy are used to investigate the different steps of functionalization.The property of peptides to form stable complexes with metal ions is exploited to achieve metal-ion recognition by the peptide-modified PSi-based biosensor. An electrochemical study of the GlyHisGlyHis-modified PSi electrode is achieved in the presence of copper ions. The recorded cyclic voltammograms show a quasi-irreversible process corresponding to the Cu(II)/Cu(I) couple. The kinetic factors (the heterogeneous rate constant and the transfer coefficient) and the stability constant of the complex formed on the porous silicon surface are determined. These results demonstrate the potential role of peptides grafted on porous silicon in developing strategies for simple and fast detection of metal ions in solution.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21711937 PMCID: PMC3211508 DOI: 10.1186/1556-276X-6-412
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nanoscale Res Lett ISSN: 1556-276X Impact factor: 4.703
Figure 1Transmission IR spectra of modified PSi. (a) Hydrogenated surface after electrochemical fabrication. (b) After thermal grafting of undecylenic acid. (c) After activation treatment of 90 min in an aqueous solution of 5 mM EDC and 5 mM NHS. (d) After amidation in 0.1 mM Gly-His-Gly-His in 1 × PBS buffer.
Figure 2High-resolution XPS spectrum in the C1s region of GlyHisGlyHis-modified PSi.
Figure 3Reaction scheme of the transition metal complexation on a porous silicon sensor modified with peptide. In this case, Gly-His-Gly-His chelating Cu(II) cations.
Figure 4Cyclic voltammetry of a GlyHisGlyHis-modified PSi surface. (a) Before copper accumulation, (b) after copper accumulation. Scan rate = 0.5 V/s.
Figure 5Plots of the anodic peak potential against logarithm of scan rate for Gly-His-Gly-His-modified PSi after copper accumulation. (a) For all scan rates considered. (b) In the case where Ep > 200 mV.
Figure 6Calibration curve of anodic peak current density against copper concentration.