| Literature DB >> 31450819 |
Thanih Balbaied1, Eric Moore2.
Abstract
Alkaline phosphatase (ALP), which catalyzes the dephosphorylation process of proteins, nucleic acids, and small molecules, can be found in a variety of tissues (intestine, liver, bone, kidney, and placenta) of almost all living organisms. This enzyme has been extensively used as a biomarker in enzyme immunoassays and molecular biology. ALP is also one of the most commonly assayed enzymes in routine clinical practice. Due to its close relation to a variety of pathological processes, ALP's abnormal level is an important diagnostic biomarker of many human diseases, such as liver dysfunction, bone diseases, kidney acute injury, and cancer. Therefore, the development of convenient and reliable assay methods for monitoring ALP activity/level is extremely important and valuable, not only for clinical diagnoses but also in the area of biomedical research. This paper comprehensively reviews the strategies of optical and electrochemical detection of ALP and discusses the electrochemical techniques that have been addressed to make them suitable for ALP analysis in cell culture.Entities:
Keywords: Lab-on-chip technology; alkaline phosphatase (ALP); electrochemical biosensors; microarrays technology; nanomaterials; optical biosensors
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31450819 PMCID: PMC6784369 DOI: 10.3390/bios9030102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosensors (Basel) ISSN: 2079-6374
Figure 1Illustrates the 3D structure of ALP shaped in two monomers (A and B). The central core of ALP (active sites) is formed by the link of the two monomers. The metals position in the edge of both monomers (red). In the licorice representation, the inorganic phosphate and metal ions are presented [16].
Figure 2ALP isoenzyme with common names, place function limitation [19].
Figure 3ALP produced in each stage in cells [26].
Number of nanomaterials for enhancing optical assays.
| Detection Technique | Nanomaterials | Linear Range | Limit of Detection | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| gold nanoparticles | 100–600 U/L | 1000 U/L | [ |
|
| gold nanoparticles | 4 × 10−11 M to 4 × 10−15 M | 4 × 10−15 M | [ |
|
| gold nanoparticles | 0.72 to 3 U/L | 0.01 U/L | [ |
|
| gold nanoclusters | 0.02–2.0 U/L. | 0.005 U/L | [ |
|
| silver nanoclusters | 1–100 U/L | 0.63 U/L | [ |
|
| copper nanoclusters | 0.5 to 150 mU/mL | 0.1 mU/mL | [ |
|
| nitrogen-doped carbon dots | 2.5 to 45 U/L | 0.4 U/L | [ |
|
| α-moo3- × nano-flakes | 0.06 to 1 IU | [ |
Number of nanomaterials for enhancing electrochemical assays.
| Detection Technique | Nanomaterials | Linear Range | Limit of Detection | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| silicon-nanowire | 0.03–0.3 U/L | 0.3 U/L | [ |
|
| copper sulfide nanoparticle | 0.1 to 100 U/L | 0.02 U/L | [ |
|
| gold nanoparticle | 3 to 50 U/L | 0.2 U/L | [ |
|
| gold nanoparticle-carbon nanotubes | 0.5 to 600 IU/L | 0.25 IU/L | [ |
|
| graphic carbon nitride (g-C3N4)/TiO2 nanotubes | 0.3 mU/L–1 U/L | 0.1 mU/L. | [ |