Development of a polyphenol oxidase biosensor from Jenipapo fruit extract (Genipa americana L.) and determination of phenolic compounds in textile industrial effluents

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Abstract

In this work, an innovative polyphenol oxidase biosensor was developed from Jenipapo (Genipa americana L.) fruit and used to assess phenolic compounds in industrial effluent samples obtained from a textile industry located in Jaraguá-GO, Brasil. The biosensor was prepared and optimized according to: the proportion of crude vegetal extract, pH and overall voltammetric parameters for differential pulse voltammetry. The calibration curve presented a linear interval from 10 to 310 μM (r2 = 0.9982) and a limit of detection of 7 μM. Biosensor stability was evaluated throughout 15 days, and it exhibited 88.22% of the initial response. The amount of catechol standard recovered post analysis varied between 87.50% and 96.00%. Moreover, the biosensor was able to detect phenolic compounds in a real sample, and the results were in accordance with standard spectrophotometric assays. Therefore, the innovatively-designed biosensor hereby proposed is a promising tool for phenolic compound detection and quantification when environmental contaminants are concerned.

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APA

Antunes, R. S., Ferraz, D., Garcia, L. F., Thomaz, D. V., Luque, R., Lobón, G. S., … Lopes, F. M. (2018). Development of a polyphenol oxidase biosensor from Jenipapo fruit extract (Genipa americana L.) and determination of phenolic compounds in textile industrial effluents. Biosensors, 8(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/bios8020047

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