콘텐츠로 건너뛰기
Merck
  • The efficiency of immobilised glutamate oxidase decreases with surface enzyme loading: an electrostatic effect, and reversal by a polycation significantly enhances biosensor sensitivity.

The efficiency of immobilised glutamate oxidase decreases with surface enzyme loading: an electrostatic effect, and reversal by a polycation significantly enhances biosensor sensitivity.

The Analyst (2005-12-21)
Colm P McMahon, Gaia Rocchitta, Pier A Serra, Sarah M Kirwan, John P Lowry, Robert D O'Neill
초록

The apparent Michaelis constant, K(M), for glutamate oxidase (GluOx) immobilised on Pt electrodes increased systematically with enzyme loading. The effect was due, at least in part, to electrostatic repulsion between neighbouring oxidase molecules and the anionic substrate, glutamate (Glu). This understanding has allowed us to increase the Glu sensitivity of GluOx-based amperometric biosensors in the linear response region (100+/-11 nA cm(-2)microM(-1) at pH 7.4; SD, n=23) by incorporating a polycation (polyethyleneimine, PEI) to counterbalance the polyanionic protein. Differences in the behaviour of glucose biosensors of a similar configuration highlight a limitation of using glucose oxidase as a model enzyme in biosensor design.

MATERIALS
제품 번호
브랜드
제품 설명

Sigma-Aldrich
L-Glutamate Oxidase from Streptomyces sp., recombinant, expressed in E. coli, lyophilized powder, ≥5.0 units/mg solid