| Literature DB >> 33804997 |
Carlos Sainz-Urruela1, Soledad Vera-López1,2, María Paz San Andrés1,2, Ana M Díez-Pascual1,2.
Abstract
Over the last years, different nanomaterials have been investigated to design highly selective and sensitive sensors, reaching nano/picomolar concentrations of biomolecules, which is crucial for medical sciences and the healthcare industry in order to assess physiological and metabolic parameters. The discovery of graphene (G) has unexpectedly impulsed research on developing cost-effective electrode materials owed to its unique physical and chemical properties, including high specific surface area, elevated carrier mobility, exceptional electrical and thermal conductivity, strong stiffness and strength combined with flexibility and optical transparency. G and its derivatives, including graphene oxide (GO) and reduced graphene oxide (rGO), are becoming an important class of nanomaterials in the area of optical and electrochemical sensors. The presence of oxygenated functional groups makes GO nanosheets amphiphilic, facilitating chemical functionalization. G-based nanomaterials can be easily combined with different types of inorganic nanoparticles, including metals and metal oxides, quantum dots, organic polymers, and biomolecules, to yield a wide range of nanocomposites with enhanced sensitivity for sensor applications. This review provides an overview of recent research on G-based nanocomposites for the detection of bioactive compounds, providing insights on the unique advantages offered by G and its derivatives. Their synthesis process, functionalization routes, and main properties are summarized, and the main challenges are also discussed. The antioxidants selected for this review are melatonin, gallic acid, tannic acid, resveratrol, oleuropein, hydroxytyrosol, tocopherol, ascorbic acid, and curcumin. They were chosen owed to their beneficial properties for human health, including antibiotic, antiviral, cardiovascular protector, anticancer, anti-inflammatory, cytoprotective, neuroprotective, antiageing, antidegenerative, and antiallergic capacity. The sensitivity and selectivity of G-based electrochemical and fluorescent sensors are also examined. Finally, the future outlook for the development of G-based sensors for this type of biocompounds is outlined.Entities:
Keywords: ascorbic acid; bioactive compound; curcumin; gallic acid; graphene; graphene oxide; hydroxytyrosol; melatonin; oleuropein; resveratrol; tannic acid; tocopherol
Year: 2021 PMID: 33804997 PMCID: PMC8037795 DOI: 10.3390/ijms22073316
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Scheme 1Representation of bottom-up and top-down approaches for G synthesis. GDQ: graphene quantum dots.
Scheme 2Molecular structures of Graphene, Graphene Oxide, and Reduced Graphene Oxide.
Figure 1(a) TEM images of graphene quantum dots (GQDs) of different sizes and the photoluminescence spectrum excited at 400 nm. (b,c) High-resolution transmission electron microscopy (HRTEM) images of GQDs. Taken from Wu et al. [32].
Scheme 3Basic representation of a chemical sensor.
Scheme 4Chemical structure of the selected antioxidants.
Biological and physical properties of the antioxidants, their nutrient sources, and medical uses.
| Antioxidant | Biological Properties | Physical Properties | Nutrient Sources | Functions and Medical Uses | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Melatonin | Immunomodulatory | Off-white powder | Coffee, Tea | Control of hypertension, obesity, and metabolic syndrome | [ |
| Gallic Acid | Antimicrobial | Crystalline white powder | Blueberries | Control of periodontal disease | [ |
| Tannic Acid | Astringent | Light yellow amorphous powder | Red wine | Inhibitor of NO2 production | [ |
| Resveratrol | Anticancer | White to yellow powder | Peanuts | Natural reducing agent | [ |
| Hydroxytyrosol | Immunostimulant | White powder | Olive leaves | Prevention of sexual dysfunctions | [ |
| Tocopherol | Antiageing | Yellow- brown liquid | Nuts | Prevention of macular degeneration | [ |
| Ascorbic acid (Vitamin C) | Antiageing | white powder | Guava | Prevention of Hepatitis | [ |
| Curcumin | Anticancer | yellow crystalline solid (keto-) or liquid (enol-) | Curcuma | Colitis and stomach ulcer protection | [ |
S20 °C = solubility in water at 20 °C; Mw = Molecular weight; d25 °C = density at 25 °C; Tm = melting temperature; b.p. = boiling point; Td = decomposition temperature.
Figure 2Representation of the anchoring of polymer chains onto graphene (G) via “grafting-to”, “grafting-from”, and “grafting-through” approaches. Adapted from Eskandari et al. [145].
Figure 3Graphene-coated carbon screen-printed electrode (G-CSPE) with the three-electrode system: a reference electrode, a working electrode, and an auxiliary or counter electrode.
Figure 4Differential pulse voltammetry (DPVs) for the determination of melatonin (MLT) at the N-reduced graphene oxide (rGO)/CuCo2O4/carbon paste electrode (CPE) in the presence of 2 mM dopamine and tryptophan. Taken from Tadayon et al. [166].
Characteristics of graphene-based sensors for the detection of bioactive compounds.
| Bioactive Compound | Carbon Nanomaterial | Processing Method | Detection Method | Linear Range | LOD | Properties | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| GO@SiO2 nanocomposite | Modified Hummers´ + Sol-gel with PTEOS and TMOS | dsPE + HPLC | - | <0.1 µg/mL | Cost-effective, simple, selective and sensitive. | [ |
| G-CSPE | G Sonication + Drop-casting | CV and FPA | - | 0.87 µM | Good sensitivity, reversibility, Ic/Ia ≈ 1. | [ | |
| CVD G-CSPE | G Suspension + Drop-casting | DPV | - | 15 µg/L | Good sensitivity, reproducibility, versatility, better results than the electrode without G | [ | |
| GON-CSPE | Longitudinal unzipping + hydrazine reduction + ultrasonication + drop-casting | CV and DPV | - | 1.1 µM | Good reproducibility | [ | |
| rGO/MIP | Modified Hummers´ + hydrazine reduction + rGO Suspension + Drop-casting + electropolymerization. | CV and SWV | 0.05–100 µM | 6 nM | Stable and highly sensible. | [ | |
| rGO/Fe3O4 | Modified Hummers´ + hydrazine reduction + hydrothermal growth | SWV | 0.02–5.80 µM | 8.4 nM | Good selectivity, repeatability, reproducibility, and biocompatibility. | [ | |
| rGO/SnO2-Co3O4 | Modified Hummers´ + SnO2 reduction + hydrothermal growth | CV and SWV | 0.02–6.00 µM | 4.1 nM | Good sensitivity, selectivity, stability, and repeatability; cost-effective and simple fabrication. | [ | |
| N-rGO/CuCo2O4 nanocomposite | Modified Hummers´ + hydrazine reduction + solvothermal method | DPV and SWV | 0.01–3.0 µM | 4.9 nM | Enhanced selectivity, sensitivity, and biocompatibility. | [ | |
| CVD G/CuO-PLL nanocomposite | CVD growth + electrochemical deposition | CV and SWV | 0.016–110 μM | 12 nM | Good sensitivity and biocompatibility. | [ | |
| rGO | Modified Hummers´ + MLT reduction | CV | - | - | Simple, reproducible and biocompatible. | [ | |
|
| NPGA | hydrothermal reduction of GO with PPD + freeze-drying | DPV and SWV | 2.5–1000 μM | 67 nM | Large specific surface area and excellent electrical conductivity. | [ |
| G/ZrO2 | Hydrothermal growth + physical mixing | DPV and SWV | 1µM–1 mM | 124 nM | High surface area, good biocompatibility, and electrical conductivity. | [ | |
| rGO/ZrO2/Co3O4 | Modified Hummers´ + hydrazine reduction + ultrasonication + drop casting | CV and DPV | 6.2–478 nM | 1.56 nM | Good sensitivity, selectivity, reproducibility, and stability vs. interferences. | [ | |
| MWCNT/rGO | Drop-casting + UV reduction | CV and EIS | 29–329 pM | 2.57 pM | Excellent sensibility, reproducibility, and long-term stability. | [ | |
| CS/Fe2O3/ERGO | Solvothermal synthesis of Fe2O3 + ultrasonicaction + drop casting electrochemical reduction | DPV and EIS | 1–100 µM | 0.15 µM | Large surface area, excellent electronic conductivity, and high stability. | [ | |
| PANI–rGO–TiO2 | Solvothermal synthesis of TiO2 + aniline polymerization + mixing + ultrasonication | CV and PC | 4.17–250 µM | 1.72 µM | Rapid response, high sensitivity, and excellent selectivity. | [ | |
| GQDs | Pyrolysis of citric acid | LLE + Fluorescence | 5–40 mg/L | 1.08 mg/L | Simple, sensitive, and reproducible. Fast response. | [ | |
|
| GQDs | Pyrolysis of Citric Acid | UV-Vis and Fluorescence | 0.1–1 µM | 0.26 nM | Good selectivity and applicability. | [ |
| Zn-G | Electrolysis of graphite rods | DPV | 2–60 ppb | 3.13 ppb | Sustainable and cost-effective. | [ | |
|
| CX6@RGO | Ultrasonication + mixing+ freeze drying. | UV-Vis and Fluorescence | 2–40 µM | 0.47 µM | Fast, simple, sensitive and selective. | [ |
| Porous G | Laser-induced conversion of Kapton/PI tape into 3D porous G | DPV | 0.2–50 μM | 0.16 μM | Excellent repeatability, stability, reproducibility, and reliability. | [ | |
| rGO-GCE | Sonication + electrochemical deposition | CV and DPV | 0.8–32 μM | 0.2 μM | Long-term stability; low-cost, eco-friendly, and effective. | [ | |
|
| GOPGE | Sonication + drop casting | DPV | 0.10–37 μM | 30 nM | Good sensitivity and selectivity. | [ |
| TiOx-RGO@GCE | Hummer´s + reduction with AA + sol gel + drop casting | CV and SWV | 1–12 μM | 18.7 nM | Good sensitivity, simple and accurate. | [ | |
| TiO-rGO | Hummer´s + reduction with AA + sol gel + drop casting | CV and SWV | 5–30 μM | 0.57 nM | Good sensitivity and selectivity. | [ | |
| GONs | Ultrasonication + unzipping of MWCNTs + drop casting | CV, EIS, and DPV | - | - | Excellent performance and is fast. | [ | |
|
| NF/ERGO/GCE | ultrasonicaction + drop casting electrochemical reduction | DPV | 0.5–90 μM | 0.06 μM | Excellent selectivity, sensitivity, and reproducibility. Fast and cost-effective. | [ |
| ILs/MIP/GO/QDs | one-step polymerization | Fluorescence | 23–92 nM | 3.5 nM | Excellent photochemical stability and sensitivity. | [ | |
|
| GLY-GQDs | pyrolysis with EG | Fluorescence | 0.03–17.0 μM | 25 nM | High sensitivity and selectivity. | [ |
| rGO | Dilution + drop casting | FIA with amperometric detection | 65–253 μM | 4.7 μM | Simple, sensitive and accurate, and precise. | [ | |
| NiO/G | Coprecipitation synthesis of NiO + ultrasonication + drop casting | CV and DPV+ chronoamperometry | - | 50 μM | Good selectivity and sensitivity, and cost-effective, easy to handle. | [ | |
| GQDs/IL-SPCE | Pyrolysis of Citric Acid + drop casting | CV and EIS | 25–400 μM | 6.64 μM | High sensitivity and conductivity, good biocompatibility, cost-effective. | [ | |
| rGO/AuNPs/SPE | G suspension + mixing electrochemical deposition | CV and DPV | 20–375 μM | 1.04 μM | High selectivity and sensitivity. | [ | |
| Graphene ink coated glass | Water immersion + electrochemical reaction | CV | 50–1000 μM | 17.8 μM | Simple and cost-effective. | [ | |
| rGO/PDA/AuNPs | GO reduction by PDA + mixing | CV + EIS | 4.93–9.60 mM | 1.64 mM | Good biocompatibility and conductivity. | [ | |
| MoS2-PANI/rGO | one-pot hydrothermal synthesis + drop casting | CV and DPV | 8 mM–50 μM | 22.2 μM | High selectivity, good reproducibility, and stability. | [ | |
| NFG/AgNPs/PANI | NFG coating on FTOE + electropolymerization of PANI | CV | 10–11460 µM | 8 µM | Good reproducibility and excellent selectivity. | [ | |
| GCE/Pd/rGO | Sonication + electrodeposition | CV, DPV, and EIS | 0.3–1.3 mM | 22 µM | Fast response, good selectivity. | [ | |
| GCE/GO/CdTeQDs | Hydrothermal synthesis + drop casting | CV + EIS | 32.3–500 µM | 6.1 µM | Inexpensive, reliable, and sensitive. | [ | |
| 3D-HG/GCE | Wet-chemical etching + drop casting | DPV | 0.2 μM–3.2 mM | 15 nM | High sensitivity and selectivity, excellent electrocatalytic activity. | [ | |
|
| rGO/CPE | Pulverization + drop casting | CV and DPV | 10–6000 μM | 3.18 μM | Good replicability catalytic activity, and storage stability. | [ |
| ERGO/GCE | Electrochemical reduction + drop casting | CV | 0.2 μM–60 μM | 0.1 μM | Good replicability and catalytic activity. | [ | |
| G/GCE | Drop casting | CV, EIS | 0.05–3.0 μM | 0.03 μM | High selectivity and accuracy. | [ | |
| rGO/GCE | Drop casting | CV, DPV | 0.1 nM–10 nM | 0.9 pM | Exceptional sensibility. | [ | |
| NSrGO/Ru@ AuNPs | SWV | 0.001–0.1 nM | 0.2 pM | Exceptional sensibility. | [ |
Phenyl triethoxysilane (PTEOS); Tetramethoxysilane (TMOS); Dispersive solid-phase extraction (dSPE); Graphene-coated carbon screen-printed electrode (G-CSPE); Cyclic voltammetry (CV); Fixed-potential amperometry (FPA); Current of anodic peak (Ia); Current of cathodic peak (Ic); Differential pulse voltammetry (DPV); Molecular imprinted polymer (MIP); Square wave voltammetry (SWV); Nitrogen doped reduced graphene oxide (N-rGO); poly(L-lysine) (PLL); Graphene oxide nanoribbons (GON); Graphene reduced nanoribbons (GRN); Diode Array Detection (DAD); Nitrogen-doped porous graphene aerogel (NPGA); p-phenylenediamine (PPD); Chitosan (CS); Electrochemically reduced graphene oxide (ERGO); Photocurrent measurements (PC); Graphene Quantum Dots (GQDs); p-sulfonated calix[6]arene (CX6); Nafion (NF); Polydopamine (PDA); Polyaniline (PANI); Nitrogen-doped functionalized graphene (NFG); Three dimensional holey graphene (3D-HG); fluorine-doped tin oxide electrode (FTOE); Flow injection analysis (FIA).
Figure 5Schematic illustrations of the preparation of ZrO2/Co3O4/rGO nanocomposite and oxidation mechanisms of gallic acid (GA), caffeic acid (CA), and protochatechuic acid (PA). Taken from Puangjan et al. [172].
Figure 6Diagram showing the formation of Au-nanoparticles (NPs) using GA under low-temperature sonication conditions. Adapted from Ganesh et al. [173].
Figure 7Schematic illustration of the photoelectrochemical process for GA oxidation at a polyaniline (PANI)–rGO–TiO2 modified electrode. Taken from Ma et al. [175].
Figure 8Fluorescence emission spectra of GQDs in the presence of different tannic acid (TA) concentrations, from 0.1 to 50 µM. The inset shows the linear plot of the intensity versus TA concentration. Taken from Sinduja et al. [179].
Figure 9Displacement assay for resveratrol using calix(6)arene (CX6)-modified reduced graphene oxide (CX6@RGO) against a fluorescent dye. Taken form Li et al. [185].
Figure 10Cyclic voltammetric (CV) curves of 0.1 mM oleuropein (OL) on a TiO-rGO electrode at different scan rates from 25 to 1000 mV s−1. Taken from Yazar et al. [195].
Figure 11Representation of the synthesis of GO/QDs@molecular imprinted polymers (MIP) by a one-pot room temperature synthesis strategy with reverse microemulsion polymerization. Taken from Liu et al. [200].
Figure 12Cyclic voltammograms of (a) Bare graphite (b) Bare graphite with 5 mM ascorbic acid (AA) (c) NiO/G electrode in 0.1 M phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), pH 7.0 (d) NiO/G with 5 mM AA in 0.1 M buffer solution. Taken from Swamy et al. [203].
Figure 13TEM images and X-ray diffraction (XRD) pattern of RGO/polydopamine(PDA)/Au nanohybrids. Taken from Shi et al. [207].
Figure 14Representation of the synthesis of metal nanoparticles (NPs)-grafted N-doped functionalized graphene (NFG)/polyaniline (PANI) nanocomposites. Taken from Salahandish et al. [209].
Figure 15Schematic representation of the synthesis of l-cystein/rGO/Ru@AuNPs. Taken from Kotan et al. [220].