JOURNAL ARTICLE

Adsorptive Stripping Voltammetric Detection of Single‐Stranded DNA at Electrochemically Modified Glassy Carbon Electrode

Huai‐Sheng WangHuangxian JuHong‐Yuan Chen

Year: 2002 Journal:   Electroanalysis Vol: 14 (23)Pages: 1615-1620   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract Electrochemically modified glassy carbon electrode (GCE) was used to study the electrochemical oxidation and detection of denatured single‐stranded (ss) DNA by means of adsorptive stripping voltammetry. The modification of GCE, by electrochemical oxidation at +1.75 V (vs.SCE) for 10 min and cyclic sweep between +0.3 V and −1.3 V for 20 cycles in pH 5.0 phosphate buffer, results in 100‐fold improvement in sensitivity for ssDNA detection. We speculated that the modified GCE has a high affinity to single‐stranded DNA through hydrogen bond (specific static adsorption). Single‐stranded DNA can accumulate at the GCE surface at open circuit and produce a well‐defined oxidation peak corresponding to the guanine residues at about +0.80 V in pH 5.0 phosphate buffer, while the native DNA gives no signal under the same condition. The peak currents are proportional to the ssDNA concentration in the range of 0–18.0 μg mL −1 . The detection limit of denatured ssDNA is ca. 0.2 μg mL −1 when the accumulation time is 8 min at open circuit. The accumulation mechanism of ssDNA on the modified GCE was discussed.

Keywords:
Detection limit Electrochemistry Stripping (fiber) Chemistry Guanine Electrode Cyclic voltammetry Adsorption Buffer solution Voltammetry Inorganic chemistry Nuclear chemistry Analytical Chemistry (journal) Chromatography Materials science Organic chemistry Nucleotide Physical chemistry Biochemistry

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Topics

Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques
Life Sciences →  Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology →  Molecular Biology
Electrochemical Analysis and Applications
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Electrochemical sensors and biosensors
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