Abstract
Amperometry in stirred solution has been used for the systematic evaluation of modified screen-printed carbon electrodes (SPCEs) with a view to developing a reagentless biosensor for uric acid. The developed system consists of a base cobalt phthalocyanine (CoPC) electrode tailored to the electrocatalytic oxidation of H2O2 by means of a cellulose acetate (CA)–uricase bilayer. Uricase was immobilized by drop-coating the enzyme onto the CA membrane covering the CoPC-SPCE. The device exploits the near-universal H2O2-generating propensity of oxidases, the permselectivity of the CA film towards H2O2 and the electrocatalytic oxidation of this product at the CoPC-SPCE. The electrochemical oxidation of the resulting Co+ species was used as the analytical signal, facilitating the application of a greatly reduced operating potential when compared with that required for direct oxidation of H2O2 at unmodified electrodes. The time required to achieve 95% of the steady-state current (t95iSS) was 44 s [relative standard deviation = 7.5%(n= 10)]. Amperometric calibrations were linear over the range from 13 × 10–6 to 1 × 10–3 mol dm–3, with the former representing the limit of detection. The CA membrane extended the linear range of the biosensor by over two orders of magnitude, when apparent Michaelis–Menten constants (Km′) of immobilized and free enzymes are compared. This suggests that the process is diffusion-controlled and not governed by the kinetics of the enzyme. The precision of electrode fabrication was determined by cyclic voltammetry to be 4.9%(n= 6). Successive amperometric calibrations (n= 7) over 7 d using a single sensor revealed only a 14.0% diminution in sensitivity from the original response. Sensor stability and the dependence of the steady-state current on the pH, ionic strength and temperature of the supporting electrolyte were studied and the results are presented. The functioning of the biosensor is indifferent to a wide range of potential interferences studied in a synthetic sample and results correlate favourably with those of a standard hospital method.