Different nonconducting polymers have been synthesized on the surface of a platinum (Pt) electrode to assemble fast-response and sensitive amperometric biosensors for choline, butyrylcholine, and acetylcholine, based on choline oxidase (ChOx) and acetylcholinesterase (AchE) or butyrylcholinesterase
Biosensors for choline, choline esters and inhibitors of choline esterase
✍ Scribed by U. Wollenberger; K. Setz; F.W. Scheller; U. Löffler; W. Göpel; R. Gruss
- Book ID
- 103960212
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 350 KB
- Volume
- 4
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0925-4005
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✦ Synopsis
A choline electrode has been developed k.y coupling immobilized choline oxidase to a hydrogen peroxide electrode. The co-immobilization of cholinesterase permits acetylcholine to be measured. The excess of both enzymes results in a diffusion-limited electrode response for both substrates, with relative sensitivities 1: 0.6 for choline compared with acetylcholine.
When a kinetically controlled bienzyme sensor with a low activity of cholinesterase is used, a diminished sensitivity is obtained for acetylcholine with an increased sensitivity of inhibitors such as NaF, butoxycarboxime, trichlorfon or dimethoate. Potentially disposable sensors for those inhibitors have been constructed with cholinesterase co-immobilized with choline oxidase in a gelatin membrane on a platinum electrode and with cholinesterase immobilized in polyurethane on a thick-film metallized platinum electrode. The decreased formation rate of thiocompounds from thiocholinesters serves as a measure for the inhibited enzyme in the latter set-up.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
The loading of choline esterase (ChE) and choline oxidase (ChOx) in the enzyme membrane of an acetylcholine biosensor was optimized based on a layer-by-layer construction of the bienzyme layers on the surface of a platinum (Pt) and a Pt-black electrode. To this goal, ChE and ChOx were tagged with bi
A simple and efficient novel method for isolating picomole amounts of choline and choline esters in milliliter volumes of Krebs-Ringer solution has been developed. The procedure is based on the observation that the solubility of choline esters in acetonitrile is 104-lo5 times higher than that of the