The most common enzyme labels in biosensors are alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP), which, however, have some limitations for use in electrochemical immunosensors. DT-diaphorase (DT-D) is a redox enzyme that catalyzes a two-electron reduction of quinone in the presence of NADH or NADPH. Importantly, DT-D from Bacillus stearothermophilus (EC 1.6.99.-) has a low molecular weight (30 kDa) and high thermal and long-term stability. Nevertheless, DT-D has never been employed as a catalytic label in biosensors. In this presentation, we report that DT-D can be used as a bifunctional enzyme label for rapid and sensitive electrochemical immunosensors: DT-D can convert an electrochemically inactive substrate into an electrochemically active product and DT-D can participate in electrochemical-chemical (EC) and electrochemical-enzymatic (EN) redox cycling induced by the product. We found that DT-D has high catalytic activities for nitroso reduction, phosphoester hydrolysis, and carboxyl ester hydrolysis as well as quinone reduction in the presence of NADH. 4-Nitroso-1-naphthol, 1-amino-2-naphthyl phosphate, and 4-aminonaphthalene-1-yl acetate are used as electrochemically inactive substrates for corresponding enzymatic reactions, which are converted into electrochemically active aminohydroxy-naphthalenes. This combination of DT-D and the substrates allows for high electrochemical signal-to-background ratios, because (i) the catalytic reaction by DT-D is fast, (ii) the electrochemical oxidation of the aminohydroxy-naphthalenes is rapid, even at an indium-tin oxide electrode, and (iii) two redox cycling processes significantly increase the electrochemical signal. The electrochemical immunosensor using DT-D and 4-nitroso-1-naphthol detects parathyroid hormone with a low detection limit of 2 pg/mL, the immunosensor using DT-D and 1-amino-2-naphthyl phosphate detects outer membrane vesicles from Escherichia coli with a detection limit of 8 ng/mL, and the immunosensor using DT-D and 4-aminonaphthalene-1-yl acetate detects thyroid-stimulating hormone with a detection limit of ~2 pg/mL. DT-D may be used as a catalytic label in sensitive and stable bioassays instead of common ALP and HRP. References 1. P. Nandhakumar, A. M. Ichzan, N.-S. Lee, Y. H. Yoon, S. Ma, S. Kim, H. Yang, ACS Sens. in press. 2. A. Bhatia, P. Nandhakumar, G. Kim, J. Kim, N.-S. Lee, Y. H. Yoon, H. Yang, ACS Sens. 4, 1641 (2019) 3. A. M. Ichzan, S. Lee, C. S. Fang, P. Nandhakumar, H. Ha, J. M. Joo, K. Kim, H. Yang, Anal. Chem . 91, 4680 (2019) 4. P. Nandhakumar, A.-M. J. Haque, N.-S. Lee, Y. H. Yoon, H. Yang, Anal. Chem. 90, 10982 (2018) 5. C. Kang, J. Kang, N.-S. Lee, Y. H. Yoon, H. Yang, Anal. Chem. 89, 7974 (2017)
Thomas E. ConoverL. L. DanielsonLars Ernster
Gabriella TedeschiShiuan ChenVincent Massey