3D-Printed graphene/polylactic acid electrode for bioanalysis: Biosensing of glucose and simultaneous determination of uric acid and nitrite in biological fluids

•Fused deposition modeling 3D-printed electrode for (bio)sensors applied to real samples.•Enzymatic glucose biosensing on 3D-printed graphene-PLA electrode in plasma.•Oxygenated groups from PLA matrix favored enzyme immobilization by crosslinking.•Graphene-PLA 3D-printed electrochemical response imp...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inSensors and actuators. B, Chemical Vol. 307; p. 127621
Main Authors Cardoso, Rafael M., Silva, Pablo R.L., Lima, Ana P., Rocha, Diego P., Oliveira, Thiago C., do Prado, Thiago M., Fava, Elson L., Fatibello-Filho, Orlando, Richter, Eduardo M., Muñoz, Rodrigo A.A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Lausanne Elsevier B.V 15.03.2020
Elsevier Science Ltd
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:•Fused deposition modeling 3D-printed electrode for (bio)sensors applied to real samples.•Enzymatic glucose biosensing on 3D-printed graphene-PLA electrode in plasma.•Oxygenated groups from PLA matrix favored enzyme immobilization by crosslinking.•Graphene-PLA 3D-printed electrochemical response improves after surface treatment.•Rapid and precise analysis of urine and saliva by pulsed amperometry using flow system. Additive manufacturing, also known as 3D-printing, is receiving great interest by chemists due to the easy design of novel materials, fast prototyping and reducing waste, which enables large-scale fabrication of electrochemical devices. Herein we demonstrate the development of (bio)sensors for the analysis of biological fluids using 3D-printing. Fused deposition modelling was used to fabricate (bio)sensing platforms from commercially-available filaments made of polylactic acid containing graphene (G-PLA). An enzymatic glucose biosensor fabricated on the G-PLA surface was developed and applied for glucose sensing in blood plasma using chronoamperometry. Oxygenated groups from the polymeric matrix provides suitable condition to enzyme immobilization by crosslinking with glutaraldehyde. The biosensor presented a limit of detection (LOD) of 15 μmol L−1, inter-day and intra-day precision lower than 5 %, and adequate recovery values (90–105 %) for the analysis of plasma. We also show that the surface treatment of the 3D-printed sensor (mechanical polishing followed solvent immersion) provides improved electrochemical properties for the direct detection of nitrite and uric acid. Differential-pulse voltammetry and multiple-pulse amperometry under flow conditions were evaluated and compared for the determination of both species in saliva and urine. Highlights are presented for the amperometric detection within a linear range from 0.5–250 μmol L−1 for both analytes, LODs of 0.02 and 0.03 μmol L−1 for uric acid and nitrite, respectively, and high precision (RSD < 2.1 %). This report shows the first application of 3D-printed sensors and biosensors for the analysis of real biological samples with analytical features comparable to conventional modified electrodes.
ISSN:0925-4005
1873-3077
DOI:10.1016/j.snb.2019.127621