Electrochemical Immunosensing Platform for the Determination
of the 20S Proteasome Using an Aminophenylboronic/Poly-indole-6-carboxylic
Acid-Modified Electrode
posted on 2020-07-22, 21:04authored byFrancisco Martínez-Rojas, Victor C. Diculescu, Francisco Armijo
The
first electrochemical immunosensor for the determination of
the 20S proteasome (P20S) was developed, entailing the immobilization
of an antibody on an aminophenylboronic/poly-indole-6-carboxylic acid-modified
electrode. The proposed electrochemical bioplatform is a simple and
feasible analytical tool applicable for the determination of P20S
in human plasma, considering its high clinical and biological relevance.
Cyclic voltammetry, electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, and square
wave voltammetry (SWV) were used to determine the optimal step-by-step
process to obtain the electrochemical immunosensor. The interaction
of P20S with the recognition layer of the immobilized antibody on
the nanostructured surface took place by incubating the electrode
in a P20S solution at 20 °C for 2 h. Using SWV as an electro-analytical
technique, this immunosensor can quantify P20S. The current was linear
with the P20S concentration within two dynamic concentration ranges
from 20.0 to 80.0 and 80.0 to 200.0 ng·mL–1 (r2 = 0.992 and 0.98, respectively)
with a limit of detection and quantification of 6 and 18 ng·mL–1, respectively. Moreover, the immunosensor showed
considerable repeatability and reproducibility, when the determination
was done in human serum, which confirms that it is a promising alternative
for direct detection of P20S in biological fluids with minimal interference.