| Literature DB >> 35391571 |
Cristina Tortolini1, Anthony E G Cass2, Riccardo Pofi3, Andrea Lenzi3, Riccarda Antiochia4.
Abstract
Dopamine (DA), epinephrine (EP), and norepinephrine (NEP) are the main catecholamine of clinical interest, as they play crucial roles in the regulation of nervous and cardiovascular systems and are involved in some brain behaviors, such as stress, panic, anxiety, and depression. Therefore, there is an urgent need for a reliable sensing device able to provide their continuous monitoring in a minimally invasive manner. In this work, the first highly nanoporous gold (h-nPG) microneedle-based sensor is presented for continuous monitoring of catecholamine in interstitial fluid (ISF). The h-nPG microneedle-based gold electrode was prepared by a simple electrochemical self-templating method that involves two steps, gold electrodeposition and hydrogen bubbling at the electrode surface, realized by sweeping the potential between + 0.8 V and 0 V vs Ag/AgCl for 25 scans in a 10 mM HAuCl4 solution containing 2.5 M NH4Cl, and successively applying a fixed potential of - 2 V vs Ag/AgCl for 60 s. The resulting microneedle-based h-nPG sensor displays an interference-free total catecholamine detection expressed as NEP concentration, with a very low LOD of 100 nM, excellent sensitivity and stability, and fast response time (< 4 s). The performance of the h-nPG microneedle array sensor was successively assessed in artificial ISF and in a hydrogel skin model at typical physiological concentrations.Entities:
Keywords: Catecholamine; Dopamine; Electrochemical sensor; Epinephrine; Microneedles; Nanoporous gold needle; Norepinephrine
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35391571 PMCID: PMC8989844 DOI: 10.1007/s00604-022-05260-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mikrochim Acta ISSN: 0026-3672 Impact factor: 6.408
Scheme 1Schematic representation of the h-nPG-modified microneedle electrode
Fig. 1SEM images of Au bare microneedles (A and B) and h-nPG microneedle electrode (C and D)
Fig. 2The Nyquist plots of bare Au electrode (A), microneedle bare Au electrode (B), and microneedle h-nPG electrode (C) in 5 mM [Fe(CN)6]3−/4− + 0.1 M KCl and the equivalent circuit used for fitting the experimental data (D). (E) The EIS results from the electrochemical Nyquist plot fitting
Fig. 3CVs of 0.1 mM DA (A), EP (B), and NEP (C) in PBS 0.1 M, KCl 0.1 M, pH 7.4 at 25 mV s−1 using h-nPG microneedle electrode. In the insets Au bare microneedle electrode. (D) A possible DA oxidative pathway
Fig. 4CVs of 0.1 mM DA, with microneedle h-nPG electrode at the following scan rates: 5 (black), 10 (red), 25 (blue), and 50 mV s−1 (pink) in 0.1 M PBS and 0.1 M KCl (pH 7.4). In the inset, the plot of the peak current density vs scan rate (5–300 mV s−1) (n = 3)
Fig. 5DPVs of 0.5 mM DA (A), EP (B), and NEP (C) 0.5 mM in presence of 4 mM AA and 0.6 mM UA with h-nPG microneedle electrode
Influence of interfering compounds on DA, EP, and NEP response (200 μM) of the h-nPG microneedle sensor
| Interfering compound | DA (μM) | Recovery (%) | EP (μM) | Recovery (%) | NEP (μM) | Recovery (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Glucose | 197 | 98.5 | 198 | 99 | 196.5 | 98.2 |
| L-cysteine | 195 | 97.5 | 196 | 98 | 198 | 99 |
| L-lysine | 194 | 97 | 195 | 97.5 | 197 | 98.5 |
| Urea | 201 | 100.5 | 196 | 98 | 198 | 99 |
| Citric acid | 192 | 96 | 194 | 97 | 196 | 98 |
| NaCl | 196 | 98 | 203 | 101.5 | 201 | 100.5 |
| Folic acid | 204 | 102 | 195 | 97.5 | 198 | 99 |
Interference amount added = 500 μM; glucose added = 5 mM
Fig. 6CVs of microneedle h-nPG sensor in 0.1 M PBS, pH = 7.4, and KCl = 0.1 M, at the following NEP concentrations: 0, 5, 10, 20, 30, 50, 60, 75, 100, 185, 450, and 850 μM. Experimental conditions: scan rate = 25 mV s−1; T = 25 °C. In the inset: calibration curve of NEP in phosphate buffer (A), in artificial ISF (B), and in gel skin model (C) (n = 3)
Comparison of analytical parameters of nanostructured sensors reported in literature for CA detection
| Electrode | Modification strategy | CA | Linear range | LOD (µM) | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| nPG/GCE | Dealloying | DA | - | 0.2 | [ |
| nPG/AuE | Electrodeposition | DA | 0.1–40 | - | [ |
| nPG/AuE | Electrodeposition | EP | 50–1000 | 1.8 | [ |
| h-nPG/Au microneedles | Electrodeposition | NEP | 5–850 | 0.1 | This work |
| N-UNCD/TiE | Microwave plasma CVD | DA | 1–30 | - | [ |
| ECR/GCE | Electrodeposition | NEP | 2–50 | 1.5 | [ |
| TiO2-BH/CPE | Drop casting | NEP | 4–1100 | 0.5 | [ |
| NMM/CPE | Mixing NMM with graphite powder/paraffin oil into a paste | NEP | 0.07–2000 | 0.04 | [ |
| Tyr/CDs/CA/AuE | Cross-linking/physical adsorption | NEP | 1–200 | 0.2 | [ |
| CeO2-PEDOT/MWCNT/GCE | Electrodeposition/drop-casting | DA | 0.1–10 40–400 | 0.03 | [ |
| CNT-Nb | Physical vapor deposition | DA | - | 0.011 | [ |
| RuS2NPs/GCE | Hydrothermal synthesis | DA | 0.1–10 | 0.074 | [ |
In the upper part, nanoporous gold-modified sensors
nPG nanoporous gold, GCE glassy carbon electrode, AuE gold electrode, N-UNCD nitrogen-incorporated ultrananocrystalline diamond, TiE titanium electrode, CVD chemical vapor deposition, ECR eriochrome cyanine, CPE carbon paste electrode, BH = 2,2-[1, 2] buthanediylbis(nitriloethylidyne)]-bis-hydroquinone, NMM nanostructured mesoporous material, Tyr tyrosine, CDs carbon dots, CA cysteamine, Ce = 2-PEDOT nanoceria-poly (3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene, CNT-Nb carbon nanotube-coated niobium, RuSNPs ruthenium disulfide nanoparticles