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A lactate electrochemical biosensor with a titanate nanotube as direct electron transfer promoter

Mingli Yang1,2, Jin Wang1, Huaqing Li1, Jian-Guo Zheng3 and Nianqiang Nick Wu1,4

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Hydrogen titanate (H2Ti3O7) nanotubes (TNTs) have been synthesized by a one-step hydrothermal processing. Lactate oxidase (LOx) enzyme has been immobilized on the three-dimensional porous TNT network to make an electrochemical biosensor for lactate detection. Cyclic voltammetry and amperometry tests reveal that the LOx enzyme, which is supported on TNTs, maintains their substrate-specific catalytic activity. The nanotubes offer the pathway for direct electron transfer between the electrode surface and the active redox centers of LOx, which enables the biosensor to operate at a low working potential and to avoid the influence of the presence of O2 on the amperometric current response. The biosensor exhibits a sensitivity of 0.24 µA cm−2 mM−1, a 90% response time of 5 s, and a linear response in the range from 0.5 to 14 mM and the redox center of enzyme obviates the need of redox mediators for electrochemical enzymatic sensors, which is attractive for the development of reagentless biosensors.


PACS

87.80.-y Biophysical techniques (research methods)

82.80.Fk Electrochemical methods

82.45.Rr Electroanalytical chemistry

87.14.E- Proteins

07.07.Df Sensors (chemical, optical, electrical, movement, gas, etc.); remote sensing

87.85.Qr Nanotechnologies-design

Subjects

Instrumentation and measurement

Medical physics

Biological physics

Chemical physics and physical chemistry

Dates

Issue 7 (20 February 2008)

Received 26 September 2007, in final form 7 November 2007

Published 29 January 2008



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