(81b) Enzyme Engineering to Produce SWCNT Nanosensors As a Generalizable Platform for Biochemical Imaging and Sensing
AIChE Annual Meeting
2024
2024 AIChE Annual Meeting
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Forum
Bionanotechnology for Sensors and Imaging
Monday, October 28, 2024 - 8:20am to 8:40am
In this work, to test the generalizability of generating enzyme-SWCNT nanosensors, we synthesized conjugates by direct sonication of SWCNT with following enzymes: GOx, choline oxidase (ChOx), horseradish peroxidase (HRP), acetylcholineesterase, tyrosinase, cholesterol oxidase (CholOx), lactate oxidase, alcohol oxidase, xanthine oxidase, and galactose oxidase. Remarkably, six out of nine enzymes yielded stable suspensions of enzyme-SWCNT conjugates following probe-tip sonication, all of which successfully worked as nanosensors to detect their corresponding analytes. These nanosensors, in particular HRP-SWCNT and CholOx-SWCNT, exhibited excellent responses to their targets, with a maximum ÎF/F0 of up to 300 % and 100 %, respectively. H2O2 is known to quench SWCNT fluorescence, and H2O2 nanosensors previously developed with SWCNT exhibited a negative fluorescence modulation as the sensor output with some challenges towards nanosensor selectivity. We highlight that our approach enables HRP-SWCNT nanosensor generation, which provides a strong ÎF/F0 = 300 % and instantaneous turn-on response towards H2O2 within 2 s. Next, we sought to show that enzyme inactivation can produce SWCNT-based nanosensors that detect analytes without analyte consumption. To do so, we use ChOx as a model system to show that recombinant enzymes can be used as a generalizable approach to generating catalytically-inactive nanosensors. As expected, nanosensors prepared with mutant-ChOx exhibited responses comparable to those prepared with native ChOx, but without consuming the analyte or producing toxic byproducts such as H2O2. Thus, sonication-based physisorption of engineered enzymes to SWCNTs holds the potential to facilitate rapid nanosensor generation capable of detecting various biologically relevant molecules with reversibility and biocompatibility, thereby motivating their use in in vivo applications.
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