1. Electrochemical and Computational Studies of Citrate-modified β-cyclodextrin@Fe3O4 Nanocomposite as a Nonenzymatic Sensor for Cholesterol.
- Author
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Nasution, Mochammad Arfin Fardiansyah, Firmanti, Metya Indah, Riyanto, Hanzhola Gusman, Sanjaya, Afiten Rahmin, Saepudin, Endang, and Ivandini, Tribidasari Anggraningrum
- Subjects
CHOLESTEROL ,THREONINE ,CITRATES ,METHYLENE blue ,MAGNETIC particles ,ELECTRODE potential ,PALMITIC acid - Abstract
A composite of citrate-modified β-cyclodextrin (CIT-BCD) and Fe
3 O4 was prepared by coprecipitation for a non-enzymatic cholesterol sensor application. Characterization using X-ray diffraction spectroscopy confirmed the spinel structure of Fe3 O4 , whereas infrared spectroscopy indicated that the composite of CIT-BCD@Fe3 O4 was successfully synthesized. The cholesterol was detected on the basis of the competition of the inclusion complex formation between β-cyclodextrin (BCD) and cholesterol, and between BCD and methylene blue (MB), and the magnetic particles of Fe3 O4 were used as the support medium of BCD. BCD was modified with citrate to improve its cholesterol loading capacity for a computational study through molecular docking simulation, which confirmed that cholesterol formed higher complex stabilities with both BCD and CIT-BCD than with MB, with the ΔGbinding values, of the complexes being -6.4 and -5.7 kcal/mol, respectively. A ratio of 3% (w/w) CIT-BCD@Fe3 O4 nanocomposite and a contact time of 10 min were then found as optimum conditions. Furthermore, amperometric measurements performed using a screen-printed carbon electrode at an applied potential of -0.43 V (vs Ag/AgCl) with a measurement time of 90 s was conducted to detect the MB released from the system. Amperometry results showed good linearity (R2 > 0.99) in the cholesterol concentration range of 0-100 µM with an estimated limit of detection of 3.93 µM. Good selectivity towards ascorbic acid, palmitic acid, tyrosine, and threonine was observed, whereas a significant change in current response was found in the presence of arginine. The developed method was successfully demonstrated to determine cholesterol levels in commercial corned beef samples. The method was also successfully validated by HPLC, indicating that the developed sensor is promising for real applications in cholesterol detection, especially in the matrix of meat samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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