Micro- and Nanoelectrodes: Fabrication, Characterization and Application. the Detection of Silver and ROS/Rns in Biological Buffer

Monday, 14 October 2019
Grand Ballroom (The Hilton Atlanta)
P. Sidambaram (FOCAS Research Institute, TU Dublin) and J. Colleran (Technological University Dublin)
The electrochemical determination of low concentrations of silver, and the short-lived highly reactive oxygen and nitrogen species (ROS/RNS), requires reliable, reproducible measurements with sensitive analytical methods. In this work, gold, platinum and platinum black micro and nanoelectrodes were fabricated. Characterisation revealed flat disk-shaped working areas of 20 - 25 µm (micro) and 1 - 10 nm (nano) in diameter, derived from steady-state limiting currents and validated using FE-SEM.[1] Reported studies on silver detection have been carried out under a myriad of conditions but, to date, electrochemical determination of silver in biological buffers and media has not been successful.[2] Ultra-low concentrations of silver (1 nM – 80 nM) were determined, by anodic stripping voltammetry (ASV) with Ag/AgBr as a reference electrode, using micro- and nanoelectrodes of platinum and gold in chloride-free phosphate buffer (PB, pH 7.4). Laser pulled electrodes exhibit highly reproducible stripping voltammetry data for the determination of silver and returned linear calibration curves. A low detection limit of 1.3 pM in this medium provides the ability to explore silver and silver-based bioinorganic drug uptake by tumour and microbial cells. [3]

This study also includes the fabrication of Pt/Pt-black nanoelectrodes for the detection of ROS/RNS in chloride-free PB (pH 7.4). These data should help with the identification and quantitation of cellular ROS/RNS release. In particular, monitoring oxidative stress, as a cellular response on exposure to bioinorganic drugs, should help to elucidate the interaction pathway of bioinorganic anti-cancer drugs. We envisage that electrochemical speciation studies will help to elucidate the mechanism of action and cellular uptake of bioinorganic silver-based anti-microbial and anti-cancer drugs in cell sustaining media for in vitro and, potentially, in vivo single cell analysis.

[1] Percival, S. J. et al., RSC Adv. 2014, 4 (21), 10491.

[2] Radulescu, M. C. et al., Sensors 2010, 10 (12), 11340.

[3] Prabhakar Sidambaram. et al., J. Electrochem. Soc. 2019, 166, 6, B532.