A reagentless amperometric glucose biosensor based on 5-amino-1,10-phenanthroline, gold nanoparticles and glucose oxidase

  • Katažyna Blaževič
  • Aistė Krikštaponytė
  • Anton Popov
  • Almira Ramanavičienė
  • Asta Kaušaitė-Minkštimienė
Keywords: reagentless amperometric glucose biosensor, 1,10-phenanthroline-5,6-dione, gold nanoparticles, glucose oxidase

Abstract

Glucose monitoring is essential for the management of diabetes and for ensuring an accurate analysis in clinical and food-related applications. In this study, a reagentless amperometric glucose biosensor was developed based on the layer-by-layer adsorption of 5-amino-1,10-phenanthroline (AP), 13 nm diameter gold nanoparticles (AuNPs), and glucose oxidase (GOx) onto a graphite rod electrode, followed by chemical cross-linking of GOx with glutaraldehyde vapour. AP acted as a redox mediator, enabling an efficient electron transfer, while AuNPs facilitated signal amplification. The biosensor exhibited a wide linear range (0.30–10.0 mM), low limits of detection and quantification (LOD 0.05 mM, LOQ 0.17 mM), a high repeatability (RSD 3.19%) and an acceptable reproducibility (RSD 5.51%), along with an excellent selectivity toward glucose and a satisfactory storage stability (86% signal retention over 7 days), and anti-interference performance against uric and ascorbic acids. These features demonstrate the biosensor’s suitability for routine and point-of-care glucose monitoring. Furthermore, the proposed platform is versatile and can be adapted for the detection of other clinically or environmentally relevant analytes, highlighting its potential for broader analytical applications.

Published
2026-03-25
Section
Analytical Chemistry