Electrochemical sensor based on Arthrobacter globiformis for cholinesterase activity determination.

Article Details

Citation

Stoytcheva M, Zlatev R, Valdez B, Magnin JP, Velkova Z

Electrochemical sensor based on Arthrobacter globiformis for cholinesterase activity determination.

Biosens Bioelectron. 2006 Jul 15;22(1):1-9. Epub 2005 Dec 20.

PubMed ID
16376069 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The sensors applied recently for determination of cholinesterase activity are mostly enzymatic amperometric sensors, in spite of their disadvantages: short life-time at ambient temperature, instability of the response, interferences, as well as passivation of the electrode surface. In the present paper a new approach for determination of cholinesterase activity was proposed, overcoming the main drawbacks of the analysis performed with amperometric enzymatic sensors. Instead of the immobilization of enzymes on a conducting electrode surface, whole cells of Arthrobacter globiformis, containing choline oxidase were fixed on a Clark type oxygen probe. Current proportional to bacteria respiration is registered as a sensor response. The application of whole cells of bacteria as a sensing element permits to achieve high stability of the response and long life-time of the sensor at ambient temperature, due to the conservation of the enzyme in its natural micro-environment inside the immobilized cells. The proposed sensor keeps its functionality more than 7 weeks stored in deionized water at ambient temperature. For the first 2 weeks the amplitude of the response decreases with only 10% and at the end of the studied 7 weeks period the response was 50% of the initial. The other advantages of the proposed sensor are: the dissolved oxygen is used as a mediator which concentration can be reliably and interferences free measured by the aim of a Clark type oxygen probe applied as a transducer; reproducible bacterial membranes can be elaborated by filtration of resuspended bacterial culture after preliminary determination of its activity; application of membranes containing lyophilized bacteria capable to be conserved infinitely long time and activated just before their application; negligible cost compared with the sensors based on immobilized enzymes. The steady-state response of the proposed bacterial sensor to choline obtained in 200 s is linear in the investigated concentration range up to 2 x 10(-4) moldm(-3), with detection limit of 8 x 10(-8) moldm(-3) and sensitivity of 4 x 10(-1) microAcm(3)mol(-1), at pH 6, temperature of 25 degrees C and stirring rate of 300 rpm. Choline is formed as a result of the catalytic hydrolysis (depending on the cholinesterase activity) of the substrate acetylcholine. Linear calibration graph for cholinesterase activity determination was obtained in the range up to 11 mUcm(-3), with a slope of 1.97 x 10(-2) microAcm(3)mU(-1), at pH 6, temperature of 25 degrees C and stirring rate of 300 rpm. The tests with reconstituted lyophilized serum with known activity used as a control sample confirm the accuracy of the proposed method. The relative error of the determination was only 2.82%.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Drug Targets
DrugTargetKindOrganismPharmacological ActionActions
CholineCholinesteraseProteinHumans
Unknown
Product of
Details
Choline salicylateCholinesteraseProteinHumans
Unknown
Product of
Details