BIOSENSOR AND MANUFACTURING METHOD THEREFOR
20210282681 · 2021-09-16
Inventors
- Kwang-Bok Kim (Incheon, KR)
- Yoon-Bo SHIM (Busan, KR)
- Han-gyol PARK (Seoul, KR)
- Youn-joo SONG (Seoul, KR)
- Seong-Je Cho (Suwon-si, KR)
- Chul-ho Cho (Yongin-si, KR)
- Dong-Min KIM (Busan, KR)
Cpc classification
G01N27/3271
PHYSICS
C08G61/126
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08G2261/1426
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
G01N27/3275
PHYSICS
C08G2261/44
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
A61B5/14865
HUMAN NECESSITIES
A61B5/14532
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G2261/3223
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
G01N27/327
PHYSICS
International classification
A61B5/1486
HUMAN NECESSITIES
C08G61/12
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C12Q1/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
Disclosed is a biosensor. The biosensor comprises: an electrode; and a polymer structure disposed on the electrode and formed of poly-5,2′:5′,2″-terthiophene-3-carboxylic acid (pTTCA), wherein an enzyme is present in a state of covalently binding with pTTCA inside the polymer structure.
Claims
1. A biosensor, comprising: an electrode; and a polymer structure disposed on the electrode and formed of poly-5,2′: 5′,2″-terthiophene-3′-carboxylic acid (pTTCA), wherein an enzyme is in covalent bonding with pTTCA in the polymer structure.
2. The biosensor as claimed in claim 1, further comprising: a gold-zinc alloy oxide layer (AuZn oxide layer) disposed between the electrode and the polymer structure.
3. The biosensor as claimed in claim 1, wherein the enzyme has an amine group, and wherein the amine group of the enzyme and a carboxyl group of pTTCA form the covalent bonding.
4. The biosensor as claimed in claim 1, wherein the enzyme is selected from a group consisting of glucose oxidase, glucose dehydrogenase, hexokinase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, and glutamine pyruvic transaminase.
5. The biosensor as claimed in claim 1, further comprising: a supporting body disposed under the electrode, wherein the electrode has a needle shape disposed in a vertical direction based on the supporting body.
6. A method for manufacturing a biosensor, the method comprising: generating monomers formed by covalent boding between 5,2′: 5′,2″-terthiophene-3′-carboxylic acid (TTCA) and an enzyme; and polymerizing the monomers on an electrode and depositing a polymer layer on the electrode.
7. The method as claimed in claim 6, further comprising: coating an electrode surface with a gold-zinc alloy oxide layer (AuZn oxide layer), wherein the depositing of the polymer layer on the electrode comprises: polymerizing the monomers on an electrode coated with the gold-zinc alloy oxide layer.
8. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the enzyme comprises an amine group, and wherein the generating of the monomers comprises: using 1-Ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide hydrochloride (EDC) and N-hydroxysuccinimide (NHS); and activating a carboxyl group of the TTCA to form covalent bonding between the carboxyl group of the TTCA and the amine group of the enzyme.
9. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the enzyme is selected from a group consisting of glucose oxidase, glucose dehydrogenase, hexokinase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, and glutamine pyruvic transaminase.
10. The method as claimed in claim 6, wherein the depositing of the polymer layer on the electrode comprises: immersing the electrode in a solution containing the monomers; and applying a voltage to the electrode to polymerize the monomers on the electrode by electropolymerization.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0020]
[0021]
[0022]
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[0033]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF EXEMPLARY EMBODIMENTS
[0034] The present disclosure is not limited to an embodiment disclosed below and may be implemented in various forms and the scope of the present disclosure is not limited to the following embodiments. In addition, all changes or modifications derived from the meaning and scope of the claims and their equivalents should be construed as being included within the scope of the present disclosure. In the following description, the configuration which is publicly known but irrelevant to the gist of the present disclosure could be omitted. In addition, the attached drawings are not drawn to scale to facilitate understanding of the present disclosure, but the dimensions of some of the components may be exaggerated.
[0035]
[0036] The biosensor 100 may be a device capable of measuring a target substance by an electrochemical method using a biological substance having a specific recognition ability for a substance to be analyzed, for example, an enzyme. Although the term biosensor is used, it can be referred to variously, for example, as a sensor, a measuring device, a measuring instrument, etc. Depending on the subject to be measured, various names such as a hydrogen peroxide sensor, a glucose sensor, and a blood glucose sensor can be used.
[0037] Electron migration may occur due to biochemical oxidation-reduction reaction occurring on the electrode surface of the biosensor 100 and the concentration of the substance in the sample may be measured by monitoring the current generated by the movement of electrons.
[0038] The biosensor 100 may include a working electrode and a counter electrode (counter or counter/reference electrode). Alternatively, the biosensor 100 may include a working electrode, a counter electrode, and a separate reference electrode.
[0039] The operation electrode may be an electrode to which an enzyme is fixed, and can be referred to as an enzyme-fixed electrode or an enzyme electrode.
[0040] Referring to
[0041] Referring to
[0042] The electrode 110 may be made of a metal or an alloy such as carbon, gold, platinum, silver, copper, or palladium.
[0043] The polymer structure 111 may be disposed on the electrode 110 and contain an enzyme therein. Specifically, in the polymer structure 111, an enzyme may be present inside the polymer structure 111 with a covalent bond (polymer-enzyme) between the polymer and the enzyme.
[0044] The polymer structure 111 may be obtained by polymerizing a monomer (TTCA-enzyme) formed by covalently bonding 5,2′: 5′,2″-terthiophene-3′-carboxylic acid (5,2′: 5,2″-terthiophene-′-carboxylic acid) (hereinafter referred to as TTCA) with an enzyme. The polymer structure 111 may be formed of poly-5,2′: 5,2″-terthiophene-3′-carboxylic acid) (hereinafter referred to as pTTCA), and the enzyme may be covalently bound to the pTTCA (pTTCA-enzyme) in the polymer structure 111.
[0045] The enzyme may include an amine group, and a covalent bond may be formed between the amine group of the enzyme and the carboxyl group of the pTTCA.
[0046] TTCA may be a polymer monomer having excellent physical, chemical, mechanical and electrical properties.
[0047] As shown in
[0048] In addition to TTCA, monomers of a conducting polymer having a carboxyl group may be used to form the polymer structure 111. For example, terthiophene benzoic acid (TTBA), di-thienylpyrrole benzoic acid (DTPBA) and the like may be used. When TTBA is used, the polymer structure 111 may be a polymerized TTBA-enzyme monomer, and the structure thereof may be such that the enzyme is covalently bonded to the poly-TTAA within the structure formed of poly-TTABA. When DTPBA is used, the polymer structure 111 may be a polymerized DTPBA-enzyme monomer, and the structure thereof may be such that the enzyme is covalently bonded to poly-DTPBA in the structure formed of poly-DTPBA.
[0049] The enzyme may be selected from various enzymes having an amine group according to the substance to be detected. For example, the enzyme may be selected from a group consisting of glucose oxidase (GOx), glucose dehydrogenase (GDH), hexokinase, glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase, and glutamic-pyruvic transaminase, but the present disclosure is not limited thereto.
[0050] For example, when the substance to be detected is glucose, when glucose oxidase fixed on the polymer structure 111 reacts with glucose, it may be oxidized to gluconic acid. When glucose is oxidized, glucose can be quantified by measuring the current due to the transfer of electrons generated when oxygen or oxidized medium is converted to hydrogen peroxide or reduced medium and then oxidized to be returned to the original oxidized form.
[0051] According to another embodiment of the present disclosure, the biosensor 110 may further include an alloy oxide layer disposed between the electrode 110 and the polymer structure 111. The alloy oxide layer may be formed of a metal selected from the group consisting of copper, cobalt, gold, platinum, and zinc. As a specific example, the alloy oxide layer disposed between the electrode 110 and the polymer structure 111 may be a gold-zinc alloy oxide layer (AuZn oxide layer).
[0052] In order to form an alloy oxide layer on the surface of the electrode 110, electrodeposition may be performed in a solution containing two or more different metal ions, and the electrodeposited metal layer may be dipped in PBS and oxidized using amperometry.
[0053] When the alloy oxide layer is applied to the surface of the electrode 110, the surface area of the electrode may be increased, so that the sensitivity may be improved. In addition, the alloy oxide layer may exhibit excellent electrochemical catalytic properties for hydrogen peroxide (H.sub.2O.sub.2) generated by the reaction of glucose and glucose oxidase during glucose measurement. In addition, it is possible to prevent contamination of the electrode surface by impurities, thereby improving the sensitivity of the biosensor. For example, in the case of measuring glucose in the blood, there is a problem in that the measurement sensitivity of glucose is lowered when ions such as Cl−, etc. are adsorbed on the surface of the electrode. An alloy oxide layer of the electrode surface may be prevented impurities from being attached.
[0054]
[0055] Referring to
[0056] Referring to
[0057] The counter electrode 220 may have an opposite polarity to the operation electrode and may be formed of an electrode material having high electrical conductivity since it is a current path between the electrodes. Each of the plurality of counter electrodes 220 may be made of a metal or an alloy such as carbon, gold, platinum, silver, copper, or palladium as the operation electrode.
[0058] The reference electrode 230 may apply a constant potential to the operation electrode, and the current may not flow toward the electrode due to the high impedance. The reference electrode 230 may be, for example, a standard hydrogen electrode (SHE), a calomel (Hg/Hg.sub.2Cl.sub.2) electrode, or a silver-silver chloride (Ag/AgCl) electrode. Since reference electrodes 230 have a relatively constant potential difference, a constant electrode potential may be applied.
[0059] The biosensor 200 may measure the blood glucose level. In this case, the operation electrode 210, the counter electrode 220, and the reference electrode 230 may have a needle shape so that the biosensor 220 may be inserted into the skin.
[0060] Electrodes in a needle shape may be disposed in a vertical direction based on the supporting body 240. To be specific, when the biosensor 200 needs to be attached to skin to measure blood glucose, the supporting body 240 may be formed of a flexible material such as rubber, so that electrodes in a needle shape may be inserted into the skin. The supporting body 240 may be in a band type to be attached to the body so that the biosensor 200 can be easily attached to the body.
[0061]
[0062] Referring to
[0063] Specifically, the carboxyl group of TTCA may be activated by using EDC (1-Ethyl-3-[3-(dimethylamino)propyl]carbodiimide hydrochloride) and NHS (N-hydroxysuccinimide), and a covalent bond between the carboxyl group of TTCA and the amine group of the enzyme may be formed.
[0064] In addition to TTCA, conductive monomers having a carboxyl group such as terthiophene benzoic acid (TTBA), di-thienylpyrrol benzoic acid (DTPBA) and the like may be used. When TTBA is used, EDC and NHS may be used to activate the carboxyl group of TTBA to form a covalent bond between the carboxyl group of TTBA and the amine group of the enzyme. When DTPBA is used, EDC and NHS may be used to activate the carboxyl group of DTPBA to form a covalent bond between the carboxyl group of DTPBA and the amine group of the enzyme.
[0065] Examples of enzymes containing an amine group that can be used herein may include glucose oxidase, glucose dehydrogenase, hexokinase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, and glutamine pyruvic transaminase.
[0066] The formed monomers may be polymerized on the electrode to deposite a polymer layer on the electrode at step S520.
[0067] The formed monomers may have conductivity and can be polymerized through electropolymerization.
[0068] Specifically, the electrodes may be immersed in a solution containing monomers, and voltages may be applied to the electrodes through potential scanning to polymerize the monomers on the electrodes. In particular, since a plurality of electrodes are present in the biosensor as described above, the polymer layer may be deposited only on the electrode to which voltage is applied by selectively applying a voltage only to the electrode to be the operation electrode.
[0069] In this case, the polymer layer may be deposited by a cyclic voltammetry (CV) method.
[0070] According to the above-described method, the polymer layer may be easily and selectively deposited only on the electrode to be the operation electrode in the electrode array including the plurality of electrodes, and the polymer layer may be formed on the electrode at once without multiple processes. Therefore, it is advantageous in that the process can be simplified.
[0071] On the other hand, before the polymer layer is deposited, the electrode may be coated with an alloy oxide. This is to prevent contamination of the electrode surface from impurities other than the measurement target substance and to widen the surface area in order to increase the measurement sensitivity.
[0072] Specifically, an electrode may be immersed in a solution in which a metal salt is dissolved, and a voltage may be applied to form an alloy layer on the surface of the electrode. In this case, a normal pulse voltammetry (NPV) may be used. Examples of metals that can be used may include copper, cobalt, gold, platinum, and zinc. As a specific example, an alloy layer of gold and zinc (AuZn layer) may be formed on the electrode surface by a pulse voltage/current method.
[0073] After the alloy layer is formed, the alloy layer may be oxidized at a constant voltage using amperometry by immersing the electrode in a buffer solution such as a PBS solution. The oxidized alloy layer may have a wide surface area structure, and thus the measurement sensitivity may be improved.
[0074] The above-described biosensor may reduce disturbance to Cl− ions and enhance glucose detection sensitivity by employing a metal alloy oxide layer and a pTTCA-enzyme layer. Moreover, it is very stable even in repeated measurement, and continuous measurement is possible even in the skin.
[0075] Hereinafter, the present disclosure will be described through specific example embodiments and experimental example. The following examples and experimental examples are only for the purpose of helping understanding the present disclosure, but the present disclosure is not limited by the following examples and experimental examples.
<Example Embodiment 1> Manufacturing of a Blood Glucose Sensor Based on a Micro Array Needle Electrode
[0076] The manufacturing process will be described with reference to
[0077] The microneedles may be made of stainless use steel (SUS) and plated with gold (Au) (see 710 in
[0078] A mixed solution of conductive polymer monomer (TTCA) and glucose oxidase (GOx) is prepared as follows.
[0079] 1) Dissolve 1 mM TTCA monomer in acetonitrile/0.1 M TBAP.
[0080] 2) Prepare a solution of glucose oxidase (GOx) 12 mg/mL and 10 mM EDC/NHS dissolved in distilled water and reacted at room temperature for 4 hrs.
[0081] 3) The two solutions are mixed to make a final concentration of 0.5 mM TTCA, and 6 mg/mL GOx and reacted at room temperature for 2 hr to form a covalent bond between the carboxyl group of TTCA and the amine group of GOx.
[0082] The SUS/Au/AuZnOx electrode may be placed in the mixed solution prepared in step 3), and the conductive polymer-enzyme layer may be formed by the circulating current and voltage method. That is, the polymer and the enzyme may be simultaneously deposited. Specifically, the electro-polymerization conditions of the conductive polymer-enzyme layer may be in a scanning range of 0.0 to 1.7 V, at a scanning speed of 100 mV/s, and at a scanning frequency of 5 times. The scanning is performed 10 cycles until a stable cyclic voltammetric curve is obtained in 0.1 M PBS solution (pH 7.4). Then, the electrode having the polymer-enzyme layer deposited thereon is washed with a mixed solvent of acetonitrile/tertiary distilled water (1:1) and distilled water, followed by drying in a cold wind. The electrode on which the conductive polymer-enzyme layer is formed is dipped once in 0.7% NaOH solution, coated with Nafion polymer film, and dried in CaCl 2 atmosphere for 4 hours to manufacture a glucose sensor (see 730 in
<Experimental Example 1> Electrochemical Properties of a Glucose Sensor
[0083] The principle of detecting glucose by a glucose sensor is to indirectly quantify glucose concentration by measuring the current generated by the oxidation of H.sub.2O.sub.2 generated through the reaction of GOx with glucose by the Au/AuZnOx layer. Therefore, the reactivity of the electrode prepared in Example 1 to H.sub.2O.sub.2 concentration is examined.
<Experimental Example 2> Identification of Optimization Conditions for Manufacturing a Blood Glucose Sensor
[0084] Optimization experiments (electrochemical electrodeposition voltage, scanning speed, oxidation potential, and electrodeposition time) for increasing the sensitivity of glucose by reducing the influence of Cl− by increasing the surface area of the metal electrode (SUS/Au) and forming an oxidation layer (see
[0085] Graph (a) of
[0086] Graph (b) of
[0087] Graphs (c) and (d) of
[0088] Graph (e) of
<Experimental Example 3> Evaluation of the Effect of Interfering Substances in Glucose Measurement
[0089]
[0090] Generally, in the case of a glucose sensor based on a gold electrode, various anions may be easily adsorbed on the gold electrode. In particular, Cl− ions may be strongly adsorbed on the surface of gold, inhibiting the oxidation reaction of glucose and hydrogen peroxide generated by the enzyme reaction. Therefore, by forming a metal alloy oxide (AuZnOx) layer, the amount of Cl− ion adsorbed on the metal surface is reduced and the sensitivity of glucose is improved. Therefore, the effect of Cl− ion is evaluated using the AuZnOx deposited glucose sensor. The sensitivity of glucose with or without Cl− ion (0.1 M) to 0.1 M PBS (pH 7.4) solution using a multi-metal alloy (AuZn) and a multi-metal alloy oxide (AuZnOx) layer is shown in table 1 below.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Without 0.1M saline With 0.1M saline AuZn AuZnOx AuZn AuZnOx Sensitivity(μA/mM) 1.16 1.23 0.11 0.43
[0091] Au-based sensors in the presence of Cl− ion may have low reactivity to glucose. Multi-metal alloy (AuZn)-based sensors and multi-metal alloy oxide (AuZnOx)-based sensors may have reduced sensitivity to glucose by 10.5 and 2.7 times, respectively. That is, it is observed that the sensitivity of the metal alloy to the glucose when the oxide (AuZnOx) layer is formed is much smaller. This means that by forming an oxide layer on the multi-metal alloy, Cl− ions may prevent adsorption on the metal surface, thereby preventing sensitivity deterioration to glucose. As a result, it is found that the glucose sensitivity of the AuZnOx-based sensor in the solution containing Cl− ion is 4 times higher than that of the AuZn-based sensor.
<Experimental Example 4> Glucose Detection Using Time-Current Method
[0092]
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Glucose concentration (mM) 0.5 1 5 10 20 30 40 50 Average 0.31 0.65 2.78 3.69 5.59 7.54 9.17 10.76 current value Absolute 0.04 0.05 0.07 0.07 0.06 0.06 0.2 0.21 standard deviation Coefficient 13.2 7.3 2.4 1.9 1.0 0.73 2.18 1.93 of variation
<Experimental Example 5> Evaluation of Reproducibility for Glucose Measurement
[0093] Glucose detection stability and reproducibility of the SUS/Au/AuZnOx/pTTCA-GOx sensor are tested.
[0094] Although exemplary embodiments have been shown and described, it will be appreciated by those skilled in the art that changes may be made to these exemplary embodiments without departing from the principles and spirit of the present disclosure. Accordingly, the scope of the present disclosure is not construed as being limited to the described exemplary embodiments, but is defined by the appended claims as well as equivalents thereto.