학술논문

Electrochemical Quantification of Glycated and Non-glycated Human Serum Albumin in Synthetic Urine
Document Type
article
Source
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces. 11(5)
Subject
Analytical Chemistry
Engineering
Chemical Sciences
Diabetes
Biosensing Techniques
Electrochemical Techniques
Enzymes
Immobilized
Equipment Design
Glycation End Products
Advanced
Humans
Models
Biological
Serum Albumin
Serum Albumin
Human
Tetrahydrofolate Dehydrogenase
Glycated Serum Albumin
human serum albumin
glycated albumin
polythiophene
iminodiacetic acid
boronic acid
dihydrofolate reductase
biosensor
Nanoscience & Nanotechnology
Chemical sciences
Physical sciences
Language
Abstract
A polymer-based electrode capable of specific detection of human serum albumin, and its glycated derivatives, is described. The sensor is constructed from a glass microscope slide coated with a synthesized, polythiophene film bearing a protected, iminodiacetic acid motif. The electrode surface is then further elaborated to a functional biosensor through deprotection of the iminodiacetic acid, followed by metal-affinity immobilization of a specific and high-affinity, albumin ligand. Albumin was then quantified in buffer and synthetic urine via electrochemical impedance spectroscopy. Glycated albumin was next bound to a boronic acid-modified, single-cysteine dihydrofolate reductase variant to quantify glycation ratios by square-wave voltammetry. The platform offers high sensitivity, specificity, and reproducibility in an inexpensive arrangement. The detection limits exceed the requirements for intermediate-term glycemic control monitoring in diabetes patients at 5 and 1 nM for albumin and its glycated forms, respectively.