» Articles » PMID: 34723454

Structure Defect Tuning of Metal-Organic Frameworks As a Nanozyme Regulatory Strategy for Selective Online Electrochemical Analysis of Uric Acid

Overview
Date 2021 Nov 1
PMID 34723454
Citations 5
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Nanozymes have been designed to address the limitations of high cost and poor stability involving natural enzymes in analytical applications. However, the catalytic efficiency of the nanozyme still needs to be improved so that it can meet the selectivity and stability requirements of accurate biomolecule analysis. Here, we presented structure defects of metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) as a tuning strategy to regulate the catalytic efficiency of artificial nanozymes and investigated the roles of defects on the catalytic activity of oxidase-like MOFs. Structural defects were introduced into a novel Co-containing zeolitic imidazolate framework with gradually loosened morphology (ZIF-L-Co) by doping cysteine (Cys). It was found that with the increase in defect degree, the properties of materials such as ascorbate oxidase-like, glutathione oxidase-like, and laccase-like were obviously enhanced by over 5, 2, and 3 times, respectively. In-depth structural investigations indicate that the doping of sulfur inducing structural defects which may destroy the equilibrium state between cobalt and nitrogen in 2-methylimidazole and distort the crystal lattice, thereby enhancing the adsorption of oxygen and thus promoting the oxidase-like activity. The ZIF-L-Co-10 mg with enhanced ascorbate oxidase- and laccase-like activity was loaded into a microreactor and integrated into an online electrochemical system (OECS) in the upstream of the detector. This nanozyme-based microreactor can completely remove ascorbic acid, dopamine, and 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid which are the main interference toward uric acid (UA) electrochemical measurement, and the ZIF-L-Co-10 mg Cys-based OECS system is capable of continuously capturing UA change in rat brain following ischemia-reperfusion injury. Structure defect tuning of ZIF-L-Co not only provides a new regulatory strategy for artificial nanozyme activity but also provides a critical chemical platform for the investigation of UA-related brain function and brain diseases.

Citing Articles

Fe-CP-based Catalytic Oxidation and Dissipative Self-Assembly of a Ferrocenyl Surfactant Applied in DNA Capture and Release.

Liu T, Zhu L, Li C, Yu Y, Zhang Z, Liu H ACS Omega. 2024; 9(22):23772-23781.

PMID: 38854516 PMC: 11154932. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.4c01715.


Recent Progress and Prospect of Metal-Organic Framework-Based Nanozymes in Biomedical Application.

Baranwal A, Polash S, Kumar Aralappanavar V, Behera B, Bansal V, Shukla R Nanomaterials (Basel). 2024; 14(3).

PMID: 38334515 PMC: 10856890. DOI: 10.3390/nano14030244.


Robust Synthesis of GO-PtNPs Nanocomposites: A Highly Selective Colorimetric Sensor for Mercury Ion (II) Detection.

Jia J, Zhu W, Du X, Din Z, Xie F, Zhou J ACS Omega. 2023; 8(48):46292-46299.

PMID: 38075784 PMC: 10701877. DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.3c08066.


green synthesis of the nanocomposites of MnO/graphene as an oxidase mimic for sensitive colorimetric and electrochemical dual-mode biosensing.

Liu Y, Zhao W, Gao Y, Zhuo Q, Chu T, Huang W RSC Adv. 2023; 13(44):31067-31076.

PMID: 37881765 PMC: 10594154. DOI: 10.1039/d3ra05879d.


Biomimetic and bioorthogonal nanozymes for biomedical applications.

Keum C, Hirschbiegel C, Chakraborty S, Jin S, Jeong Y, Rotello V Nano Converg. 2023; 10(1):42.

PMID: 37695365 PMC: 10495311. DOI: 10.1186/s40580-023-00390-6.