Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
8954922 Bioelectrochemistry 2019 16 Pages PDF
Abstract
Understanding the direct electron transfer processes between redox proteins and electrode surface is fundamental to understand the proteins mechanistic properties and for development of novel biosensors. In this study, nitric oxide reductase (NOR) extracted from Marinobacter hydrocarbonoclasticus bacteria was adsorbed onto a pyrolytic graphite electrode (PGE) to develop an unmediated enzymatic biosensor (PGE/NOR)) for characterization of NOR direct electrochemical behaviour and NOR electroanalytical features towards NO and O2. Square-wave voltammetry showed the reduction potential of all the four NOR redox centers: 0.095 ± 0.002, −0.108 ± 0.008, −0.328 ± 0.001 and −0.635 ± 0.004 V vs. SCE for heme c, heme b, heme b3 and non-heme FeB, respectively. The determined sensitivity (−4.00 × 10−8 ± 1.84 × 10−9 A/μM and - 2.71 × 10−8 ± 1.44 × 10−9 A/μM for NO and O2, respectively), limit of detection (0.5 μM for NO and 1.0 μM for O2) and the Michaelis Menten constant (2.1 and 7.0 μM for NO and O2, respectively) corroborated the higher affinity of NOR for its natural substrate (NO). No significant interference on sensitivity towards NO was perceived in the presence of O2, while the O2 reduction was markedly and negatively impacted (3.6 times lower sensitivity) by the presence of NO. These results clearly demonstrate the high potential of NOR for the design of innovative NO biosensors.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Electrochemistry
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