| Literature DB >> 33187314 |
Lucian-Gabriel Zamfir1, Mihaela Puiu1, Camelia Bala1,2.
Abstract
Endocrine disruptors (EDs) are contaminants that may mimic or interfere with the body's hormones, hampering the normal functions of the endocrine system in humans and animals. These substances, either natural or man-made, are involved in development, breeding, and immunity, causing a wide range of diseases and disorders. The traditional detection methods such as enzyme linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) and chromatography are still the golden techniques for EDs detection due to their high sensitivity, robustness, and accuracy. Nevertheless, they have the disadvantage of being expensive and time-consuming, requiring bulky equipment or skilled personnel. On the other hand, early stage detection of EDs on-the-field requires portable devices fulfilling the Affordable, Sensitive, Specific, User-friendly, Rapid and Robust, Equipment free, Deliverable to end users (ASSURED) norms. Electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS)-based sensors can be easily implemented in fully automated, sample-to-answer devices by integrating electrodes in microfluidic chips. The latest achievements on EIS-based sensors are discussed and critically assessed.Entities:
Keywords: MIP; aptasensor; biosensor; endocrine; immunosensor; impedance
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33187314 PMCID: PMC7697587 DOI: 10.3390/s20226443
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sensors (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8220 Impact factor: 3.576
List of relevant EDs compounds.
| Analyte | IUPAC Name | Chemical Structure | Molecular Weight (g/mol) | Source | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 17β-estradiol | (8R,9S,13S,14S,17S)-13-Methyl-6,7,8,9,11,12,14,15,16,17-decahydrocyclopenta[a]phenanthrene-3,17-diol |
| 272.388 | endogenous hormone, medication | [ |
| Acetamiprid | N-[(6-chloro-3-pyridyl)methyl]-N′-cyano-N-methyl-acetamidine |
| 222.678 | insecticide | [ |
| Atrazine | 6-chloro-N2-ethyl-N4-(propan-2-yl)-1,3,5-triazine-2,4-diamine |
| 215.69 | herbicide for grassy weeds in crops | [ |
| Pentabromodiphenyl ether | 2,2′,4,4′-Tetrabromodiphenyl ether |
| 485.79 | flame retardant | [ |
| Bisphenol A | 4,4′-(propane-2,2-diyl)diphenol |
| 228.291 | precursor to polycarbonates, plastic and epoxy resins | [ |
| Carbendazim | methyl 1H-benzimidazol-2-ylcarbamate |
| 191.187 | fungicide | [ |
| Cortisol | 11β,17α,21-Trihydroxypregn-4-ene-3,20-dione |
| 362.46 | endogenous hormone, medication | [ |
| Dibutyl phthalate | Dibutyl benzene-1,2-dicarboxylate |
| 278.348 | plasticizer | [ |
| Dichloro-diphenyl-trichloroethane | 1-chloro-4-[2,2,2-trichloro-1-(4-chlorophenyl)ethyl]benzene |
| 354.48 | pesticide | [ |
| Di(2-ethylhexyl) phthalate | Bis(2-ethylhexyl) benzene-1,2-dicarboxylate |
| 390.564 | plasticizer | [ |
| Microcystin-LR | (5R,8S,11R,12S,15S,18S,19S,22R)-15-[3-(diaminomethylideneamino)propyl]-18-[(1E,3E,5S,6S)-6-Methoxy-3,5-dimethyl-7-phenylhepta-1,3-dienyl]-1,5,12,19-tetramethyl-2-methylidene-8-(2-methylpropyl)-3,6,9,13,16,20,25-heptaoxo-1,4,7,10,14,17,21-heptazacyclopentacosane-11,22-dicarboxylic acid |
| 995.189 | cyanobacteria toxin | [ |
| Norfluoxetine | (S)-3-Phenyl-3-[4-(trifluoromethyl)phenoxy]propan-1-amine |
| 295.305 | antidepressant | [ |
| 3,3’,4,4’-tetrachlorobiphenyl | 3,3′,4,4′-tetrachloro-1,1′-biphenyl |
| 291.99 | flame retardants, plasticizers, dielectric and heat transfer fluids | [ |
| Testosterone | (8R,9S,10R,13S,14S,17S)-17-Hydroxy-10,13-dimethyl-1,2,6,7,8,9,11,12,14,15,16,17-dodecahydrocyclopenta[a]phenanthren-3-one |
| 288.431 | endogenous hormone, anabolic steroid | [ |
| Tributyltin hydride | tributylstannane |
| 291.06 | precursor in organic synthesis | [ |
| Zearalenone | (3S,11E)-14,16-Dihydroxy-3-methyl-3,4,5,6,9,10-hexahydro-1H-2-benzoxacyclotetradecine-1,7(8H)-dione |
| 318.369 | mycotoxin | [ |
Figure 1Common equivalent circuit models for EIS biosensors. (a) Faradaic systems with the Nyquist plot. (b) Non-Faradaic systems with the Nyquist plot. Rs = solution resistance; Rct = charge transfer resistance; Cdl = double layer capacitance; W = Warburg element; ZRE = real impedance component; ZIM = imaginary impedance component.
Figure 2Schematic illustration of (a) synthesis of PDA@Fe3O4-MIP MNPs and (b) stepwise preparation process of the electrochemical impedance sensor for 4,4′-DDT detection. Reproduced from [42] with permission of Elsevier.
Impedimetric MIP-based sensors for EDs detection.
| Analyte | Platform | Linear Range | LOD | Real Sample | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| MIP/GCE | 1 aM–1 μM | 0.36 aM | human serum | Low detection limit; | Multiple preparation and optimization steps | [ |
|
| MIP/GFE | 5–20 ppm | - | - | High selectivity; | Narrow linear range | [ |
|
| E-MIP/ITO | 1–12 mM | 0.42 mM | - | Selectivity | Low sensitivity; | [ |
|
| MIP-PPY/PGE | 0.01–1 μM | 4.5 nM | - | Simple modification protocol | Relatively high detection limit | [ |
|
| PDA@Fe3O4-MIP MNPs in solution, EIS measurements on GCE | 1 × 10−11–1 × 10−3 M | 6 × 10−12 M | radish | Reusability; | Long assay time; | [ |
|
| MIP-APTES SAM/AuIDE | 10–100 ppm | - | - | Low sample volume | Narrow linear range; | [ |
|
| MIP/AuIDE, capacitive sensor | 10–200 ppm | - | - | Simple modification protocol | Limited sensor reusability; Narrow linear range | [ |
|
| poly(o-PD) MIP/GO/GCE | 1 fM–1 μM | 0.4 fM | human serum | Fast response time; | - | [ |
|
| MIP-Fe3O4NPs/SPE | 5 pM–5 μM | 5.37 pM | sea water | Large active surface area; | Multiple separation and washing steps; | [ |
|
| poly(o-PD) MIP/SPGE | 2.5–200 ng/mL | 2.5 ng/mL | corn flakes | High selectivity; | Narrow linear range | [ |
3-Aminopropyltriethoxysilane: APTES; Au interdigitated electrode: AuIDE; gold nanoparticles: AuNP; electropolymerized molecularly imprinted polymer: E-MIP; graphite felt electrode: GFE; graphene oxide: GO; indium tin oxide: ITO; pencil graphite electrode: PGE; polypyrrole: PPY; self-assembled monolayer: SAM; screen-printed electrode: SPE; screen-printed graphene electrode: SPGE.
Figure 3Schematic representation of PFOS detection using nanoporous MOF-based receptors immobilized on capacitive electrodes. The modified interdigitated microelectrodes were integrated within a microfluidic flow-through platform. Reproduced from [37]. Copyright (2020) American Chemical Society.
Impedimetric sensors for EDs detection with graphene, carbon-nanotubes or cyclodextrins.
| Analyte | Platform | Linear Range | LOD | Real Samples | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| BPA | Fe(III)TMPP/TRGO/Au | 1 × 10−12–1 × 10−8 M | 2.1 × 10−13 M | fresh milk | High selectivity; | Additional preparation steps for the electrode materials | [ |
| DEHP | β-CD–GO/ | 2–18 μM | 0.12 μM | wastewater from | High selectivity | Narrow linear range; | [ |
| DEHP | DEHP/β-CD/G/DAD/ | 0.2–1.2 μM | 0.01 μM | river water | Good stability | Multiple preparation and optimization steps; | [ |
| PCB-77 | PyCD/SWCNT/GCE | 2–10 μM | 1 nM | - | High selectivity | Long preconcentration time (3h); | [ |
b-cyclodextrin: β-CD; 1,10-diaminodecane: DAD; graphene quantum dots: GQD; 3,3′,4,4′-tetrachlorobiphenyl: PCB-77; pyrenecyclodextrin: PyCD; single-walled carbon nanotube: SWCNT; thermally reduced graphene oxide: TRGO; triflato 5,10,15,20-tetrakis (4-metoxyphenyl) porphyrinato iron (III): Fe(III)TMPP.
Impedimetric immunosensors for the detection of EDs.
| Analyte | Platform | Linear Range | LOD | Real Sample | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| E2 | mAb/11-MUA/Ag wire electrode | 1–200 pg/mL | 1 pg/mL | water | Fast response time; | Low stability compared to MIP and aptamer-based systems; | [ |
| E2 | Ag-ZnONRs-16-PHA-mAb-E2 | 0.1–200 pg/mL | 0.1 pg/mL | tap and packaged water | Label-free; | Multiple preparation and optimization steps | [ |
| ATZ | GCE/MNF/MPA/EDC-NHS/Ab | 1 zg/mL–1 μg/mL | 0.22 zg/mL | water | Label-free; | Requires blocking of non-specific sites | [ |
| ATZ | Ab-SPA-MWCNT-ZnO/GCE | 10 zM–1 µM | 5.368 zM | - | Label-free; | Multiple preparation steps; | [ |
| BDE-47 | Ab/11-MUA/Au electrode | 0.01–0.40 μg/mL | 1.3 ng/mL | - | Facile antibody regeneration | Narrow linear ranges; | [ |
| NorFLX | 0.02–0.32 μg/mL | 8.5 ng/mL | - | [ | |||
| BPA | Ab-nano-CP/GCE | 1–100 ng/mL | 0.3 ± 0.07 ng/mL | human serum | Label-free | Narrow linear ranges | [ |
| Cortisol | Ab/β-MnO2 CNs/GCE | 0.1 pM–1500 pM | 0.023 pM | human sweat and saliva | High stability; | Requires blocking of non-specific sites; | [ |
| DBP | antigen/CS/MWCNTs@GONRs/GCE; Ab2-AuNP conjugate | 5–500 ng/L | 7 ng/mL | pure, tap, pond and river water | Low detection limit; | Risk of non-specific binding | [ |
| MC-LR | Ab/MC-LR/3D GF electrode | 0.05–20 μg/L | 0.05 μg/L | tap water | High sensitivity; | Additional preparation steps for the electrode materials; | [ |
| ZEN | Ab2@ssCo3O4/ZEN/Ab1/HA-TiO2 MC/GCE | 0.1 fg/mL–10 pg/mL | 33 ag/mL | beer | Low detection limit; | Low resolution of sensing system; | [ |
| ZEN | peptide@Tyr-RMC, Ab/poly(Gly)/AuNCs/CNHs/GCE | 10−6–10 ng/mL | 10−6 ng/mL | soybean sauce | Fast response time; | Multiple preparation and optimization steps; | [ |
11-mercaptoundecanoic acid: 11-MUA; Au nanocones: AuNCs, 16-phosphonohexadecanoic acid 16-PHA; 2,2′,4,4′-Tetrabromodiphenyl ether: BDE-47; carbon nanohorns: CNHs; dithiobis-N-succinimidyl propionate: DTSP; hyaluronic acid: HA; monoclonal antibody: mAb; monoethanolamine: MEA; electrospun manganese oxide nanofibers: MNF; manganese oxide cacti-like nanostructures: β-MnO2 CNs; 3-mercaptopropionic acid: MPA; nano-particle comprised conducting polymer: nano-CP; polyglycine: poly(Gly); Zinc Oxide nanorods: ZnONRs.
Impedimetric aptamer (Apt) and DNA biosensors for the detection of EDs.
| Analyte | Platform | Linear Range | LOD | Real Samples | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Apt/dendritic Au/BDD electrode | 1 × 10−14–1 × 10−9 M | 5 × 10−15 M | river water | High sensitivity; | - | [ |
|
| Apt/CDs/SPCE | 1.0 × 10−7–1.0 × 10−12 M | 0.5 × 10−12 M | river water | High selectivity; | Additional preparation steps for the electrode materials | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/AuNPs/Au electrode | 5–600 nM | 1 nM | wastewater, tomatoes | Simple modification protocol | Relatively low sensitivity; | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/Au/MWCNT-rGONR/GCE | 5 × 10−14–1 × 10−5 M | 1.7 × 10−14 M | - | Wide linear range | Long preparation procedure | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/GOPTS/PtNPs/PMMA/IDE | 10 pM–100 nM | 1 pM | tap and bottled mineral water | High sensitivity | Long incubation time (60min) due to large custom-made electrochemical cell | [ |
|
| 100 pM–1 μM | 10 pM | [ | ||||
|
| Apt-Au/AOO, capacitive biosensor | 1 × 10−9–1 × 10−7 M | 100 pM | - | High sensitivity; | Requires custom-made electrodes; | [ |
|
| Apt/Cu2+/PPY-NTA/GCE | 10−11–10−6 M | 1.24 × 10−12 M | - | Simple modification protocol; | - | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/Au-NPs/BDD | 1 × 10−14–1 × 10−9 M | 7.2 × 10−15 M | spiked milk | Low detection limit; | [ | |
|
| Apt/interdigitated aluminum microelectrode, capacitive biosensor | 1 fM–1 pM | 10 fM | human serum | Fast response time (20s); | - | [ |
|
| PPY/BPA@p-63/AuNP/GCE | 0.5 fM–5 pM | 80 aM | fresh milk, milkpowder, tap and pretreated water in baby glass | Low detection limit; | - | [ |
|
| Apt/IDE, capacitive biosensor | 1 fM–10 pM | 152.93 aM | - | Fast response time (20s); | - | [ |
|
| MB-DNA/MWCNTs-CS/PdNPs/C60/GCE | 0.5–25 μM | 0.35 μM | - | Detection of DNA damage induced by ED | Relatively low sensitivity; | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/Au electrode | 10 pg/mL–10 ng/mL | 8.2 pg/mL | mango juice, soya milk, tomato, plum | Simple modification protocol | Long preparation time | [ |
|
| MCH/Apt/AuNPs/1-AP-CNHs/GCE | 1–1000 pg/mL | 0.5 pg/mL | lettuce andorange juice | High selectivity | Long preparation time | [ |
|
| Apt/AuNPs/MCH/Au | 7.629 pg/mL–2 µg/mL | 0.103 pg/mL | tap water | High sensitivity; | - | [ |
1-aminopyrene modified carbon nanohorns: 1-AP-CNHs; anodized aluminum oxide: AOO; boron-doped diamond: BDD; fullerene C60: C60; carbon dots: CDs; chitosan: CS; (3-glycidyloxypropyl) triethoxysilan: GOPTS; interdigitated electrode: IDE; methylene blue: MB; 6-mercapto-1-hexanol: MCH; multiwalled carbon nanotubes: MWCNTs; palladium nanoparticles: Pd NPs; poly(methylmetacrylate: PMMA; pyrrole-nitrilotriacetic acid monomer: PPY-NTA; platinum nanoparticles: PtNPs; reduced graphene oxide nanoribbon: rGONR.
Figure 4Excitation of ACET effect is integrated into capacitance measurement during a BPA detection experiment. The ACET flow carries BPA particles, along with Bisphenol S and Bisphenol F as interfering compounds, toward functionalized sites and accelerate the sensor response. Reproduced from [66] with permission of Elsevier.
Estrogen receptor-based impedimetric biosensors for the detection of EDs.
| Analyte | Platform | Linear Range | LOD | Real Samples | Advantages | Limitations | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ER-α/AuNPs/s-BLM/Pt | 5–150 ng/L | 1 ng/L | river water | Does not require blocking of non-specific sites; | Low stability; | [ |
|
| ER-α/3-MPA/Au | - | - | - | Label-free; | Only detects total estrogenic activity; Requires blocking of non-specific sites | [ |
|
| ER-α/3-MPA/Au | 1 × 10−13–1 × 10−9 M | 1 × 10−13 M | human urine | Label-free; | Longer incubation time (90 min); | [ |
|
| ER-α/3-MPA/Au | 3.7 × 10−4–3.7 ng/L | 3.7 × 10−4 ng/L | - | Label-free; | Only detects total estrogenic activity; | [ |
3-mercaptopropionic acid: 3-MPA; bilayer lipid membranes: s-BLM.
Figure 5Preparation of the Tyrs– APTES /nTiO2/Ti biosensor: the Ti electrode was modified using self-assembled direct current (DC) sputtered nanostructured rutile TiO2 aiming the covalent immobilization of tyrosinase. The oxidation of BPA caused changes in the charge transfer properties of the interface, monitored through EIS measurements. Reproduced from [93] with permission of Elsevier.