Peroxidase-mimetic materials are intensively applied to establish multienzyme systems because of their attractive merits. However, almost all of the nanozymes explored exhibit catalytic capacity only under acidic conditions. The pH mismatch between peroxidase mimics in acidic environments and bioenzymes under neutral conditions significantly restricts the development of enzyme-nanozyme catalytic systems especially for biochemical sensing. To solve this problem, here amorphous Fe-containing phosphotungstates (Fe-PTs) featuring high peroxidase activity at neutral pH were explored to fabricate portable multienzyme biosensors for pesticide detection. The strong attraction of negatively charged Fe-PTs to positively charged substrates as well as the accelerated regeneration of Fe by the Fe/W bimetallic redox couples was demonstrated to play important roles in endowing the material with peroxidase-like activity in physiological environments. Consequently, integrating the developed Fe-PTs with acetylcholinesterase and choline oxidase led to an enzyme-nanozyme tandem platform with good catalytic efficiency at neutral pH for organophosphorus pesticide response. Furthermore, they were immobilized onto common medical swabs to fabricate portable sensors for paraoxon detection conveniently based on smartphone sensing, showing excellent sensitivity, good anti-interference capacity, and low detection limit (0.28 ng/mL). Our contribution expands the horizon of acquiring peroxidase activity at neutral pH, and it will also open avenues to construct portable and effective biosensors for pesticides and other analytes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.3c00008DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

activity neutral
12
amorphous fe-containing
8
fe-containing phosphotungstates
8
peroxidase-like activity
8
pesticide detection
8
peroxidase activity
8
fabricate portable
8
neutral
5
phosphotungstates featuring
4
featuring efficient
4

Similar Publications

The Lewis acid-catalyzed coupling of alkenes and aldehydes presents a modern, versatile synthetic alternative to classical carbonyl addition chemistry, offering exceptional regio- and stereoselectivity. In this work, we present a comprehensive computational investigation into the reaction mechanism of this transformation. Our findings confirm the occurrence of an enantioselective trans-annular [1,5]-hydride shift step and demonstrate that the enantioselectivity of the reaction arises predominantly from steric clashes between functional groups in the cyclization step.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Free ions in organic solvents of low polarity would be valuable tools for the activation of low-reactivity substrates. However, the formation of unreactive ion pairs at concentrations relevant for synthesis has prevented the success of this concept so far. On the example of highly nucleophilic pyridinamide phosphonium salts in dichloromethane, we show that asymmetric aggregation offers a solution to this general problem.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Converging lines of research indicate that inhibitory control is likely to be compromised in contexts that place competing demands on emotional, motivational, and cognitive systems, potentially leading to damaging impulsive behavior. The objective of this study was to identify the neural impact of three challenging contexts that typically compromise self-regulation and weaken impulse control. Participants included 66 healthy adults (M/SD = 29.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Eurema mandarina is a pierid butterfly that primarily feeds on plants in the family Fabaceae. In mainland Japan, adult females preferentially lay eggs on Albizia julibrissin and Lespedeza cuneata. In the field, females may oviposit on non-fabaceous plants, although rarely.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The improper disposal of plastic products/wastes can lead to the release of nanoplastics (NPs) into environmental media, especially soil. Nevertheless, their toxicity mechanisms in soil invertebrates remain unclear. This study investigated the impact of polystyrene NPs on (, 1826) immune cells, focusing on oxidative stress, immune responses, apoptosis, and necrosis.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!