The macrocyclic cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]) host has exhibited great application potential as a pharmaceutical excipient due to its versatile abilities to modulate the chemical/physical properties of drug molecules (guests) and to control their in vivo delivery and release (upon complexation). The formation of stable CB[7]@drug complexes is the prerequisite for these promising applications; we report herein a general assay strategy to quantitate the complexation based on competitive binding with surface-immobilized redox guests in conjunction with conventional electrochemical techniques (e.g., cyclic voltammetry). Particularly, by incubating a mixture of CB[7] and a drug molecule with ferrocene (Fc)-terminated self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on gold, the competitive host@guest binding between the CB[7]@drug complex formed in solution and the CB[7]@Fc complex formed on surface can be quantified with direct cyclic voltammetry measurements. On the basis of the known concentrations of CB[7]/drug and electrochemically determined surface densities of free/complexed Fc groups, the formation constant of CB[7]@drug complex can be determined. With several drug molecules as examples, we have demonstrated the capability of this method for quantitative studies of the formation of supramolecular excipient@drug complexes that are of interest in pharmaceutical and biomedical sciences. More importantly, this work promises a general assay strategy that allows electrochemical quantitation of a wide range of electro-inactive analytes based on the competitive supramolecular host@guest binding at redox-tagged molecular interfaces.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.9b04803DOI Listing

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