Volume 116, 2000

Electron-transfer pathways between redox enzymes and electrode surfaces: Reagentless biosensors based on thiol-monolayer-bound and polypyrrole-entrapped enzymes

Abstract

Based on previous results which showed that quinohemo-protein alcohol dehydrogenase (QH-ADH) entrapped within polypyrrole is able to directly transfer electrons via the conducting polymer to the electrode surface, the electron-transfer properties of this multi-cofactor enzyme adsorbed and covalently-bound to self-assembled thiol monolayers and bare electrode surfaces has been investigated more closely. While the dissolved enzyme is able to transfer electrons to the electrode via heme c as well as via the more deeply buried PQQ (fast adsorption–chemical reaction–desorption mechanism), an orientation of adsorbed QH-ADH on hydrophobic electrode surfaces, as well as of adsorbed and covalently bound QH-ADH on negatively-charged thiol monolayers could be observed. In these cases the heme c units are pointing towards the electrode surfaces resulting in an optimised direct ET rate.

Additions and corrections

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Feb 2000
First published
18 May 2000

Faraday Discuss., 2000,116, 245-255

Electron-transfer pathways between redox enzymes and electrode surfaces: Reagentless biosensors based on thiol-monolayer-bound and polypyrrole-entrapped enzymes

W. Schuhmann, H. Zimmermann, K. Habermüller and V. Laurinavicius, Faraday Discuss., 2000, 116, 245 DOI: 10.1039/B001546F

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