AI Article Synopsis

  • The study presents an electrochemical biosensor designed to detect the S100B protein using His-tagged VC1 domains from RAGE as the active recognition elements.
  • The sensor operates by immobilizing these proteins on a gold electrode, with changes in redox activity measured through a technique called Osteryoung square-wave voltammetry (OSWV).
  • Results show high sensitivity with a detection limit of 0.52 pM, and the sensor maintains performance despite interference from diluted human plasma and other tested substances.

Article Abstract

In this work we report on an electrochemical biosensor for the determination of the S100B protein. The His-tagged VC1 domains of Receptors for Advanced Glycation End (RAGE) products used as analytically active molecules were covalently immobilized on a monolayer of a thiol derivative of pentetic acid (DPTA) complex with Cu(II) deposited on a gold electrode surface. The recognition processes between the RAGE VC1 domain and the S100B protein results in changes in the redox activity of the DPTA-Cu(II) centres which were measured by Osteryoung square-wave voltammetry (OSWV). In order to verify whether the observed analytical signal originates from the recognition process between the His6-RAGE VC1 domains and the S100B protein, the electrode modified with the His6-RAGE C2 and His6-RAGE VC1 deleted domains which have no ability to bind S100B peptides were applied. The proposed biosensor was quite sensitive, with a detection limit of 0.52 pM recorded in the buffer solution. The presence of diluted human plasma and 10 nM Aβ(1-40) have no influence on the biosensor performance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4118347PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s140610650DOI Listing

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