Nazish Kanwal , Mansoor Khan , Saeed Ahmad Khan , Ahmed Bari , Essam A. Ali , Wei Sun , Tanzila Rehman , Umar Nishan , Amir Badshah
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ascorbic acid is implicated in various diseases such as scurvy, oxidative stress, cardiovascular diseases, etc. Herein, for the first time, a simple and efficient strategy was used to synthesize cross-linked chitosan-stabilized copper oxide nanoparticles (CuO@C-CS) as a non-toxic and biodegradable-based approach. Various spectroscopic techniques, including FTIR, XRD, SEM, EDX, TGA, and elemental mapping, confirmed the synthesis of the material. The synthesized nanozyme (CuO@C-CS) was used as a peroxidase mimic for the detection of ascorbic acid, through the chromogenic substrate 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) with the assistance of hydrogen peroxide. The synthesized mimic enzyme transforms colorless TMB into oxTMB. The sensing of ascorbic acid was achieved through the peroxidase-like inhibitory activity of the mimic enzyme along with the reduction of oxTMB. The sensor system was fine-tuned, and it showed a limit of detection, a limit of quantification, a linear range, and regression coefficient values of 0.24 μM, 0.80 μM, 1–96 μM, and 0.999, respectively. The fabricated sensor was very selective in the presence of various potential interferents. The proposed sensor was successfully applied to commercially available orange juices for the qualitative and quantitative determination of ascorbic acid. The sensor can be used for the determination of ascorbic acid in biomedical and food samples.
期刊介绍:
The journal''s title Analytical Biochemistry: Methods in the Biological Sciences declares its broad scope: methods for the basic biological sciences that include biochemistry, molecular genetics, cell biology, proteomics, immunology, bioinformatics and wherever the frontiers of research take the field.
The emphasis is on methods from the strictly analytical to the more preparative that would include novel approaches to protein purification as well as improvements in cell and organ culture. The actual techniques are equally inclusive ranging from aptamers to zymology.
The journal has been particularly active in:
-Analytical techniques for biological molecules-
Aptamer selection and utilization-
Biosensors-
Chromatography-
Cloning, sequencing and mutagenesis-
Electrochemical methods-
Electrophoresis-
Enzyme characterization methods-
Immunological approaches-
Mass spectrometry of proteins and nucleic acids-
Metabolomics-
Nano level techniques-
Optical spectroscopy in all its forms.
The journal is reluctant to include most drug and strictly clinical studies as there are more suitable publication platforms for these types of papers.