Mitigating dithiothreitol interference to gold/thiol interface in electrochemical detection of cathepsin B activity toward multiplex protease analysis

Bingun Habarakadage, Sabari Rajendran, Zhaoyang Ren, Morgan J. Anderson, Jessica Koehne, Lingaraju Gorla, Shunya Morita, Sara Wu, Duy H. Hua, Jun Li

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Proteases are overexpressed at various stages of conditions such as cancers and thus can serve as biomarkers for disease diagnosis. Electrochemical techniques to detect the activity of extracellular proteases have gained attraction due to their multiplexing capability. Here we employ an electrochemical approach based on a 3 × 3 gold (Au) microelectrode array (MEA) functionalized with (2-aminoethyl)ferrocene (AEF) tagged specific peptide substrates to monitor cathepsin B (CB) protease activity. Cleavage of these peptide substrates by proteases leads to an exponential decay in the alternating current voltammetry (ACV) signal. The protease activity is represented by the inverse of the decay time constant (1/τ), which is equal to (kcat/KM)[CB] based on the heterogeneous Michaelis-Menton model. However, the thiol/Au chemisorption linking AEF-peptide to gold electrodes is susceptible to interference by the protease activation reagent dithiothreitol (DTT), causing the peptides to desorb from the Au surface during continuous ACV measurement. This induces a false signal decay, masking the protease activity and reducing the sensor sensitivity. To address this, DTT is removed after activating CB using centrifugal filtration while EDTA is incorporated to maintain the enzyme activity. This allows accurate CB proteolysis kinetics and clarifies the roles of EDTA and DTT in activation. The intrinsic substrate-dependent cleavage by CB to three different peptide substrates has been demonstrated with the MEA chip, showcasing the potential for rapid activity profiling of multiple proteases. The study highlights the importance of understanding the interference of active bioreagents to the thiol/Au interface in broad redox-tagged electrochemical biosensors.

Original languageEnglish
Article number117193
JournalBiosensors and Bioelectronics
Volume273
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2025

Keywords

  • Cathepsin B
  • Dithiothreitol
  • Electrochemical stability
  • Multiplex detection
  • Proteolysis activity
  • Self-assembled monolayer

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