Development of an electrochemical immunosensor for the detection of steviol glycosides by experimental and computational methods
Date
2020-04
Authors
Hloma, Phathisanani
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Abstract
An electrochemical immunosensor employs antibodies as a capture and detection
mechanism to produce an electrical charge for the quantitative analysis of target
molecules. The current analytical methods for the separation and detection of stevia
glycosides can be tedious in terms of sample preparation and the lack of selectivity.
However, electrochemical immunosensors provide selective, sensitive and costeffective detection routes for these widely consumed sweeteners.
In this study, the author developed an electrochemical immunosensor for the detection
and quantification of steviol glycosides, a non-nutritive sweetener widely employed in
the food and beverage industries. Most of the artificial sweeteners are low-calorie
sweeteners recommended for health-related illnesses. The stability of these
sweeteners at even high temperatures has increased their applications in foodstuffs
widely. Constant exposure to these sweeteners is somehow associated with health
complications, as some are cancer-causing agents. Although there are no reports on
stevia glycosides as a health risk sweetener, its widespread use in the food industry
needs to be regulated.
Herein, the developed immunosensor was achieved by fabricating the platinum
electrodes with graphene oxide (GO) assimilated in Zinc Oxide nanoparticles
(ZnONPs) with multiwalled carbon nanotubes (MWCNTs) and immobilized with the
human sweet receptor subunit T1R2. The electrochemical detection of the natural
sweetening compound, Rebaudioside A (Reb A) was evaluated qualitatively and
quantitatively using cyclic and differential pulse voltammetry, respectively under
optimised conditions in pH 11 borate buffer from -0.4 V to 0.8 V vs Ag/AgCl.
The GO/MWCNT/ZnONPs nanocomposite was characterized using High-resolution
Transmission Electron microscope (HR-TEM), Thermogravimetric Analysis (TGA),
Attenuated Total Reflection Mode Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) and UV-VIS
spectroscopy characterization techniques. Also, asymmetric flow-field-flow
fractionation and centrifugal flow-field-flow fractionation equipped with a UV-vis and
multi-angle angle light scattering detectors were used to separate and characterize the size distribution of the synthesised ZnO nanostructures. The field flow fractionation
(FFF) is one of the efficient separation techniques known, and centrifugal flow fieldflow fractionation separates different particle sized nanoparticles by density, thus
determining size variation within the synthesised batch. The results obtained using FFF
were compared and validated with the conventional characterisation techniques
described above.
Computational studies were used to supplement experimental results using docking
and adsorption methods. Adsorption studies were carried out to better understand the
mechanistic aspects between T1R2, the nanocomposite used to modify the platinum
working electrode, and the analyte Reb A. Docking studies between the T1R2 receptor
and the steviol glycosides were used to explore the interaction and mechanism of the
immunosensor detection.
The results of this study may contribute to the development of an immunosensor that
can potentially be used to quantify steviol glycosides in the food and beverage industry
Description
Submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the Degree of Master of Applied Sciences in Chemistry in the Faculty of Applied Sciences at the Durban University of Technology, 2020.
Keywords
Steviol glycosides, Rebaudioside A, Zinc oxide nanoparticles, Human sweet taste receptor T1R2, Density functional theory (DFT), Molecular docking
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/3613