Biosensing for the environment and defence: Aqueous uranyl detection using bacterial surface layer proteins

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Abstract

The fabrication of novel uranyl (UO22+) binding protein based sensors is reported. The new biosensor responds to picomolar levels of aqueous uranyl ions within minutes using Lysinibacillus sphaericus JG-A12 S-layer protein tethered to gold electrodes. In comparison to traditional self assembled monolayer based biosensors the porous bioconjugated layer gave greater stability, longer electrode life span and a denser protein layer. Biosensors responded specifically to UO22+ ions and showed minor interference from Ni2+, Cs+, Cd2+ and Co2+. Chemical modification of JG-A12 protein phosphate and carboxyl groups prevented UO22+ binding, showing that both moieties are involved in the recognition to UO22+. © 2010 by the authors; licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland.

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Conroy, D. J. R., Millner, P. A., Stewart, D. I., & Pollmann, K. (2010). Biosensing for the environment and defence: Aqueous uranyl detection using bacterial surface layer proteins. Sensors, 10(5), 4739–4755. https://doi.org/10.3390/s100504739

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