An Oxygen-Insensitive Biosensor and a Biofuel Cell Device based on FMN L-lactate Dehydrogenase

06 June 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Lactate sensing has high importance for metabolic diseases diagnostics, food spoilage, sports medicine, or the construction of biofuel cell devices. Therefore, continuous lactate sensing devices which enable accurate detection should be developed. Here we present the overexpression and utilization of FMN-lactate dehydrogenase from Saccharomyces cerevisiae for oxygen-insensitive, continuous amperometric lactate biosensing. The developed sensors exhibit a high signal-to-noise ratio, low interference effect, and a wide range of linear responses using both direct and mediated electron transfer configurations. The thionine-based mediated electron transfer configuration was stable for 8 hours of continuous activity and two weeks of periodic activity with storage at 4°C. We further grafted the redox mediators on multiwall carbon-nanotubes to lower the redox mediator leaching effect. The developed grafting technique improved the biosensor stability and allowed continuous operation for at least 20 hours. Both the mediator-entrapped and the grafted bioanodes were further coupled with a bilirubin oxidase-based biocathode to construct a biofuel cell device. The various biofuel cells have generated a maximal power output of 110µW/cm2 under atmospheric conditions.

Keywords

amperometric biosensor
biofuel cell
lactate dehydrogenase
mediated electron transfer
direct electron transfer

Supplementary materials

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Title
Supporting information - An Oxygen-Insensitive Biosensor and a Biofuel Cell Device based on FMN L-Lactate Dehydrogenase
Description
Materials and instrumentation ScLDH cloning and overexpression ScLDH purification, SDS-PAGE, UV-Vis absorbance and Michaelis-Menten Curve Kinetic characterization of ScLDH Bioanode fabrication Bioanode DET measurement Bioanode amperometric measurement Bioanode measurement under argon Toray paper-based bioanode measurement Catalytic domain MET measurement Quantification of immobilized protein on the electrode and kET calculations Grafting-based biosensor fabrication and measurement Biocathode fabrication and measurement Enzymatic biofuel-cell fabrication and measurement Bioanode continuous and storage stability measurements Interference assay References
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