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Highly Sensitive Electrochemical Detection of Reactive Oxygen Species in Living Cancer Cells Using Monolithic Metallic Foam Electrodes
Author(s) -
Yang Yang,
Zhang Heng,
Wang Zhe,
Li Xuepeng,
Abdelsamie Abdelrahim Abdelsamie Abdalla,
Yuan Xichen,
Fan Xiaomeng,
Zhang Ruirong,
Chang Honglong
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
chemelectrochem
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.182
H-Index - 59
ISSN - 2196-0216
DOI - 10.1002/celc.202000570
Subject(s) - reactive oxygen species , electrode , materials science , nanotechnology , hydrogen peroxide , mass transport , detection limit , electrochemistry , metal , microfluidics , metal foam , cancer cell , chemical engineering , chemistry , cancer , chromatography , biochemistry , medicine , engineering physics , engineering , metallurgy
Reactive oxygen species (ROS) distribute in most mammalian cells in living organisms, and play a necessary role in signaling molecule to regulate various biological processes. To quantitatively and accurately monitor the ROS level releasing from living cells, electrochemical techniques have drawn great attention and ubiquitous innovations. However, its practicability is hindered by the sluggish electron transfer and poor mass transport efficiency between functional catalysts and their supports. Herein, we develop a three‐dimensional monolithic and metallic foam (Ag‐wire foam) to detect one typical ROS, i. e. hydrogen peroxide (H 2 O 2 ) in three cancer cells. The high electrical conductivity of Ag and the substrate‐free configuration guarantee the rapid electron flow within the metal scaffolds. The numerical model is established to depict the concentration distributions of H 2 O 2 and reaction products. It shows the inter‐fiber voids throughout the foam can provide fast reactant diffusion channels and further facilitate the mass transport. We fabricate a microfluidic chip‐based three‐electrode system to detect the trace H 2 O 2 concentration. A low detection limit of 15 nM H 2 O 2 in human leukemia K562 cancer cells and less than 20 s response time 0is observed, outperforming many previous reports. Importantly, the concept of building three‐dimensional metal wire foams demonstrated herein is hopeful to guide the designing and promote high‐performance ROS‐detection in living cells.

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