Oligosaccharide Dehydrogenase-Modified Graphite Electrodes for the Amperometric Determination of Sugars in a Flow Injection System

Abstract
Enzyme electrodes for the determination of sugars based on solid graphite electrodes modified with oligosaccharide dehydrogenase “wired” with an osmium-based one-electron (no proton) acceptor redox hydrogel were studied as sensors in a flow injection system. The enzyme and a poly(1-vinylimidazole) (PVI) where every tenth mer is complexed with osmium (4,4‘-dimethylbpy)2Cl, (denoted PVI10dmeOs) were cross-linked with poly(ethylene glycol) (diglycidyl) ether. The electrodes were active for l-arabinose, d-xylose, d-galactose, d-fructose, d-glucose, d-mannose, cellobiose, lactose, maltose, and maltooligosaccharides up to a degree of polymerization of 7. The highest relative response found was for glucose (100%) followed by maltose (40.6%) and lactose (40.6%). Fructose and isomaltotriose gave the lowest responses (Kmapp) of 23.0 ± 1.4 μA mM-1cm-2 and 4.26 ± 0.95 mM, respectively.

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