| Literature DB >> 32204503 |
Samar Damiati1,2,3, Bernhard Schuster2.
Abstract
Designing and development of electrochemical biosensors enable molecule sensing and quantification of biochemical compositions with multitudinous benefits such as monitoring, detection, and feedback for medical and biotechnological applications. Integrating bioinspired materials and electrochemical techniques promote specific, rapid, sensitive, and inexpensive biosensing platforms for (e.g., point-of-care testing). The selection of biomaterials to decorate a biosensor surface is a critical issue as it strongly affects selectivity and sensitivity. In this context, smart biomaterials with the intrinsic self-assemble capability like bacterial surface (S-) layer proteins are of paramount importance. Indeed, by forming a crystalline two-dimensional protein lattice on many sensors surfaces and interfaces, the S-layer lattice constitutes an immobilization matrix for small biomolecules and lipid membranes and a patterning structure with unsurpassed spatial distribution for sensing elements and bioreceptors. This review aims to highlight on exploiting S-layer proteins in biosensor technology for various applications ranging from detection of metal ions over small organic compounds to cells. Furthermore, enzymes immobilized on the S-layer proteins allow specific detection of several vital biomolecules. The special features of the S-layer protein lattice as part of the sensor architecture enhances surface functionalization and thus may feature an innovative class of electrochemical biosensors.Entities:
Keywords: S-layer proteins; biocompatible layer; bioinspired material; biosensor; self-assembly
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32204503 PMCID: PMC7147708 DOI: 10.3390/s20061721
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
Figure 1Schematic drawing (not drawn to scale) of the elements of an electrochemical biosensor. FETs: Field-Effect Transistors.
Figure 2Schematic drawing (not drawn to scale) of an electrochemical biosensor with an S-layer lattice as intermediate layer for linking biorecognition elements to the Au (gold) electrode surfaces.
Figure 3Transmission electron microscopy image of a freeze-etched and metal shadowed preparation of (a) an archaeal cell (from Methanocorpusuculum sinense), and (b) a bacterial cell (from Desulfotomaculum nigrificans). Bars, 200 nm. With permission from Sleytr et al. 2014 [7] (CC BY-NC-ND 3.0).
Summary of the biosensor-relevant properties of S-layer proteins and lattices Reference.
| Molecular weight of S-layer protein subunits: 40–200,000 Da | [ |
| Reactive groups (e.g., carboxyl- and amino-residues) occur on each protomer in identical position and orientation | [ |
| Two-dimensional (glyco)protein crystal composed of identical subunits | [ |
| Oblique (p2), square (p4) or hexagonal (p6) space group symmetry | [ |
| Center-to-center spacing of unit cells (= morphological units) of crystalline lattice: 3.5–35 nm | [ |
| Layer thickness: 5–10 nm | [ |
| High porosity (30%-70%) with pores of identical size (2–8 nm), morphology, and physicochemical properties | [ |
| Topography: Inner surface smooth, outer surface more corrugated | [ |
| Anisotropic charge distribution between outer and inner face: Outer face charge neutral due to an equal number of carboxyl- and amino groups. Inner face net negatively charged due to an excess of carboxyl groups | [ |
| Antifouling, non-sticky outer surface | [ |
| Self-assembly capability in aqueous media, on the air/water interface, on lipid films, and on solid surfaces like metals (gold, silver, platinum, stainless steel), glass, silicon, silicon oxide and nitride, mica, polymers (e.g., polystyrene, polyester, cellulose, polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), indium tin oxide (ITO), highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG), and carbon nanotubes | [ |
Figure 4Cyclic voltammogram of the bare and the S-layer protein-coated gold electrode in 10 mM [Fe(CN)6]3−/4− containing 100 mM KCl at a scan rate of 50 mV/s.
Figure 5The two types of electrochemical biosensors with three electrodes: reference (RE), working (WE), and counter (CE) connected to a potentiostat.
Summary of electrochemical biosensors based on S-layer proteins.
| Electrode Architecture | Immobilization Method | Biorecognition Element | Detected Species | Electro-Chemical Method | Tested Detection Range | Linear Range | Stability | Remark | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Au-SAM- SLP | Maleimide-Cys; biotin-avidin | SLP | UO22+ | EIS | 10−5–10−12 M | 10−5–10−8 M | N.D. | LOD 10−12 M | [ |
| Au/SLP-GOx | Chemical (EDC) | GOx + FCN | glucose | Amperometric | 0.5–50 mM | 0.5–50 mM | 2.2 h | blood, HSA, plasma | [ |
| Au/Pt-GOx-SUM | Chemical (EDC) | GOx | glucose | Amperometric | 2–20 mM | Up to 12 mM | 48 h | Response 10–30 s | [ |
| Au-AlcOx-SUM | Chemical (EDC) | alcohol oxidase | ethanol | Amperometric | - | Up to 7 mM | N.D. | Signal: 2.5 µA cm−2mM−1 | [ |
| Au-XanOx-SUM | Chemical (EDC) | xanthine oxidase | xanthine | Amperometric | - | Up to 0.6 mM | N.D. | Signal: 30 µA cm−2mM−1 | [ |
| Au-Maltase/ GOx-SUM | Chemical (EDC) | maltase + GOx | maltose | Amperometric | - | Up to 1.5 mM | N.D. | Signal: 1.5 µA cm−2mM−1 | [ |
| Au-Inv/Mut /GOx-SUM | Chemical (EDC) | invertase + mutarotase + GOx | sucrose | Amperometric | 1–35 mM | Up to 30 mM | 36 h | Response 300 s | [ |
| C-ChOx/ SLP | Mixed multi-layers | ChOx | cholesterol | CV | 3.1 mM | N.D. | N.D. | Langmuir/ Blodgett | [ |
| Au-SLP/ZZ-anti-Ab | ZZ-domain + anti-CD133 | anti-CD133 antibody | Liver cancer cells (HepG2) | CV | 1 × 105–6 × 106 cells | Up to 6x106 cells | N.D. | S-layer fusion protein | [ |
| Au-SLP-folate | Chemical (EDC) | folate | Breast cancer cells (MFC-7) | SWV | 1 × 104–5 × 105 cells | N.D. | N.D. | LOD 1 × 105 cells/mL | [ |
Ab—antibody; Au—gold; Cys—cysteine; EDC-1-ethyl-3—(3-dimethylaminopropyl)carbodiimide; FCN—ferrocyanide/ferricyanide; HAS—human serum albumin; LOD—limit of detection; N.D. —not detected; SAM—self-assembled monolayer; SLP—S-layer protein; SUM—S-layer ultrafiltration membrane; ZZ—Fc-binding Z-domain, a synthetic analog of immunoglobulin G (IgG-binding B—domain) of protein A of Staphylococcus aureus.
Figure 6Direct and indirect transduction (not drawn to scale). In direct approach, the electron transfers are close to the surface, whereas in the indirect one, electron shuttles between the reaction site and the sensor surface. In the proposed model, the S-layer protein lattice constitutes an intermediate matrix. In the lipid-based biosensor (left), electrons transfer from the outer membrane to the inner membrane and vice versa via a channel protein. In the detection biosensor (middle and right), electrons transfer between the enzyme–substrate complex and cell/antibody and electrode surface, respectively. The S-layer lattice provides an immobilization matrix and ion reservoir. The pores of the S-layer lattice ensure no impact on the electron transfer. Fc: fragment crystallizable; rSbpA/ZZ: recombinant S-layer protein from Lysinibacillus sphaericus CCM 2177 with fused Fc-binding Z-domain (synthetic analog of immunoglobulin G (IgG-binding B—domain) of protein A of Staphylococcus aureus).
Figure 7Generalized scheme of the construction of an S-layer ultrafiltration membrane (SUM)-based biosensor (not drawn to scale). S-layer carrying fragments or self-assembly products are deposited on a commercially available microfilter in a pressure-dependent process. The enzyme is deposited on the S-layer surface and chemically linked to the S-layer protein. The immobilized enzyme is contacted by a thin metal layer (PLD: pulse-laser-deposition). Finally, this composite structure is deposited with the metal layer side on the working electrode (WE) and mounted in a flow cell (RE: reference electrode, CE: counter electrode). The analyte is pumped in the flow cell. After passage across the modified SUM, the analyte reacts with the enzyme, which is detected by amperometry.