Heterogeneous Reconstitution of the PQQ-Dependent
Glucose Dehydrogenase Immobilized on an Electrode: A Sensitive Strategy
for PQQ Detection Down to Picomolar Levels
posted on 2014-02-18, 00:00authored byLing Zhang, Rebeca Miranda-Castro, Claire Stines-Chaumeil, Nicolas Mano, Guobao Xu, François Mavré, Benoît Limoges
A highly
sensitive electroanalytical method for determination of
PQQ in solution down to subpicomolar concentrations is proposed. It
is based on the heterogeneous reconstitution of the PQQ-dependent
glucose dehydrogenase (PQQ-GDH) through the specific binding of its
pyrroloquinoline quinone (PQQ) cofactor to the apoenzyme anchored
on an electrode surface. It is shown from kinetics analysis of both
the enzyme catalytic responses and enzyme surface-reconstitution process
(achieved by cyclic voltammetry under redox-mediated catalysis) that
the selected immobilization strategy (i.e., through an avidin/biotin
linkage) is well-suited to immobilize a nearly saturated apoenzyme
monolayer on the electrode surface with an almost fully preserved
PQQ binding properties and catalytic activity. From measurement of
the overall rate constants controlling the steady-state catalytic
current responses of the surface-reconstituted PQQ-GDH and determination
of the PQQ equilibrium binding (Kb = 2.4
× 1010 M–1) and association rate
(kon = 2 × 106 M–1 s–1) constants with the immobilized apoenzyme,
the analytical performances of the method could be rationally evaluated,
and the signal amplification for PQQ detection down to the picomolar
levels is well-predicted. These performances outperform by several
orders of magnitude the direct electrochemical detection of PQQ in
solution and by 1 to 2 orders the detection limits previously achieved
by UV–vis spectroscopic detection of the homogeneous PQQ-GDH
reconstitution.