| Literature DB >> 29388269 |
Ruibo Zhong1, Qian Tang1, Shaopeng Wang2, Hongbo Zhang3, Feng Zhang4, Mingshu Xiao1, Tiantian Man1, Xiangmeng Qu1, Li Li1, Weijia Zhang5, Hao Pei1.
Abstract
Conducting hydrogels provide great potential for creating designer shape-morphing architectures for biomedical applications owing to their unique solid-liquid interface and ease of processability. Here, a novel nanofibrous hydrogel with significant enzyme-like activity that can be used as "ink" to print flexible electrochemical devices is developed. The nanofibrous hydrogel is self-assembled from guanosine (G) and KB(OH)4 with simultaneous incorporation of hemin into the G-quartet scaffold, giving rise to significant enzyme-like activity. The rapid switching between the sol and gel states responsive to shear stress enables free-form fabrication of different patterns. Furthermore, the replication of the G-quartet wires into a conductive matrix by in situ catalytic deposition of polyaniline on nanofibers is demonstrated, which can be directly printed into a flexible electrochemical electrode. By loading glucose oxidase into this novel hydrogel, a flexible glucose biosensor is developed. This study sheds new light on developing artificial enzymes with new functionalities and on fabrication of flexible bioelectronics.Entities:
Keywords: enzyme mimicking; flexible electrochemical sensors; guanosine; low-molecular-weight hydrogels; self-assembly
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29388269 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201706887
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849