Abstract
The advancement of acetylcholinesterase (AChE) activity and its inhibitor assays is crucial for clinical diagnosis, drug screening, and environmental monitoring. A nanozyme-mediated cascade reaction system could offer promising prospects for a wide range of applications in such biosensing; however, the creation of nanozyme catalysts with diverse functionalities remains a significant challenge. Herein, we have proposed a multifunctional iron-doped polymer dots (Fe-PDs) nanozyme possessing excellent fluorescence and peroxidase (POD)-mimicking activity. Notably, the Fe-PDs nanozyme is capable of catalyzing H2O2 to produce a series of reactive oxygen species, which can simultaneously quench the fluorescence of Fe-PDs and induce a chromogenic reaction of 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB), enabling the dual-mode detection of H2O2 through both fluorescence turn-off and absorbance turn-on signals. Furthermore, by integrating acetylcholine (ACh) and choline oxidase (ChOx), we have developed a three-enzyme (AChE-ChOx-POD) cascade-based fluorometric and colorimetric dual-mode sensing platform for monitoring AChE activity and its inhibitors. The sensitive and convenient dual-mode sensor has achieved low limits of detection with 0.5 mU/mL (fluorometry) and 0.014 mU/mL (colorimetry) for AChE, respectively, which are superior to the traditional Ellman's assay. More significantly, this sensor can also be extended to detect the reversible and irreversible inhibitors of AChE, such as tacrine (IC50 = 23.3 nM) and carbaryl (LOD = 0.8 nM). We firmly believe that this innovative dual-mode nanozyme-involved multienzyme cascade system-based sensing strategy will stimulate further exploration and serve as a versatile and practical tool for biochemical sensing applications.
Published Version
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