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Author

  • Melanie Jablonski (9)
  • Michael Josef Schöning (9)
  • Arshak Poghossian (6)
  • Christina Wege (5)
  • Michael Keusgen (4)
  • Denise Molinnus (3)
  • Torsten Wagner (3)
  • Claudia Koch (2)
  • Johannes Bongaerts (2)
  • Lukas Muschallik (2)
  • Petra Siegert (2)
  • Thomas Bronder (2)
  • Carina Ronja Kipp (1)
  • Christian Wege (1)
  • David Rolka (1)
  • Felix Münstermann (1)
  • Jasmina Nork (1)
  • Marcel Leinhos (1)
  • Martina Pohl (1)
  • Patrick Hermann Wagner (1)
+ more

Year of publication

  • 2021 (4)
  • 2020 (2)
  • 2018 (1)
  • 2017 (1)
  • 2015 (1)

Document Type

  • Article (8)
  • Conference Proceeding (1)

Keywords

  • Capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
  • Label-free detection (1)
  • Plant virus (1)
  • TMV adsorption (1)
  • Ta₂O₅ gate (1)
  • Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (1)
  • Zeta potential (1)
  • acetoin (1)
  • acetoin reductase (1)
  • actuator-sensor system (1)
  • alcoholic beverages (1)
  • biosensors (1)
  • capacitive field-effect sensor (1)
  • capacitive field-effect sensors (1)
  • enzyme kinetics (1)
  • light-addressable electrode (1)
  • light-addressable potentiometric sensor (1)
  • microfluidics (1)
  • plant virus detection (1)
  • tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) (1)
+ more

Institute

  • INB - Institut für Nano- und Biotechnologien (9)
  • Fachbereich Medizintechnik und Technomathematik (8)
  • Fachbereich Chemie und Biotechnologie (3)

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Studying the spatially resolved immobilisation of enzymes on a capacitive field-effect structure by means of nano-spotting (2015)
Stefan Beging ; Marcel Leinhos ; Melanie Jablonski ; Arshak Poghossian ; Michael Josef Schöning
Field-Effect Biosensors Modified with Tobacco Mosaic Virus Nanotubes as Enzyme Nanocarrier (2017)
Melanie Jablonski ; Claudia Koch ; Thomas Bronder ; Arshak Poghossian ; Christina Wege ; Michael Josef Schöning
Field-effect biosensor using virus particles as scaffolds for enzyme immobilization (2018)
Arshak Poghossian ; Melanie Jablonski ; Claudia Koch ; Thomas Bronder ; David Rolka ; Christina Wege ; Michael Josef Schöning
A field-effect biosensor employing tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles as scaffolds for enzyme immobilization is presented. Nanotubular TMV scaffolds allow a dense immobilization of precisely positioned enzymes with retained activity. To demonstrate feasibility of this new strategy, a penicillin sensor has been developed by coupling a penicillinase with virus particles as a model system. The developed field-effect penicillin biosensor consists of an Al-p-Si-SiO₂-Ta₂O₅-TMV structure and has been electrochemically characterized in buffer solutions containing different concentrations of penicillin G. In addition, the morphology of the biosensor surface with virus particles was characterized by scanning electron microscopy and atomic force microscopy methods. The sensors possessed a high penicillin sensitivity of ~ 92 mV/dec in a nearly-linear range from 0.1 mM to 10 mM, and a low detection limit of about 50 µM. The long-term stability of the penicillin biosensor was periodically tested over a time period of about one year without any significant loss of sensitivity. The biosensor has also been successfully applied for penicillin detection in bovine milk samples.
Synthesis of α-hydroxy ketones and vicinal (R, R)-diols by Bacillus clausii DSM 8716ᵀ butanediol dehydrogenase (2020)
Lukas Muschallik ; Denise Molinnus ; Melanie Jablonski ; Carina Ronja Kipp ; Johannes Bongaerts ; Martina Pohl ; Torsten Wagner ; Michael Josef Schöning ; Thorsten Selmer ; Petra Siegert
α-hydroxy ketones (HK) and 1,2-diols are important building blocks for fine chemical synthesis. Here, we describe the R-selective 2,3-butanediol dehydrogenase from B. clausii DSM 8716ᵀ (BcBDH) that belongs to the metal-dependent medium chain dehydrogenases/reductases family (MDR) and catalyzes the selective asymmetric reduction of prochiral 1,2-diketones to the corresponding HK and, in some cases, the reduction of the same to the corresponding 1,2-diols. Aliphatic diketones, like 2,3-pentanedione, 2,3-hexanedione, 5-methyl-2,3-hexanedione, 3,4-hexanedione and 2,3-heptanedione are well transformed. In addition, surprisingly alkyl phenyl dicarbonyls, like 2-hydroxy-1-phenylpropan-1-one and phenylglyoxal are accepted, whereas their derivatives with two phenyl groups are not substrates. Supplementation of Mn²⁺ (1 mM) increases BcBDH's activity in biotransformations. Furthermore, the biocatalytic reduction of 5-methyl-2,3-hexanedione to mainly 5-methyl-3-hydroxy-2-hexanone with only small amounts of 5-methyl-2-hydroxy-3-hexanone within an enzyme membrane reactor is demonstrated.
Field-Effect Sensors for Virus Detection: From Ebola to SARS-CoV-2 and Plant Viral Enhancers (2020)
Arshak Poghossian ; Melanie Jablonski ; Denise Molinnus ; Christina Wege ; Michael Josef Schöning
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is a novel human infectious disease provoked by severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). Currently, no specific vaccines or drugs against COVID-19 are available. Therefore, early diagnosis and treatment are essential in order to slow the virus spread and to contain the disease outbreak. Hence, new diagnostic tests and devices for virus detection in clinical samples that are faster, more accurate and reliable, easier and cost-efficient than existing ones are needed. Due to the small sizes, fast response time, label-free operation without the need for expensive and time-consuming labeling steps, the possibility of real-time and multiplexed measurements, robustness and portability (point-of-care and on-site testing), biosensors based on semiconductor field-effect devices (FEDs) are one of the most attractive platforms for an electrical detection of charged biomolecules and bioparticles by their intrinsic charge. In this review, recent advances and key developments in the field of label-free detection of viruses (including plant viruses) with various types of FEDs are presented. In recent years, however, certain plant viruses have also attracted additional interest for biosensor layouts: Their repetitive protein subunits arranged at nanometric spacing can be employed for coupling functional molecules. If used as adapters on sensor chip surfaces, they allow an efficient immobilization of analyte-specific recognition and detector elements such as antibodies and enzymes at highest surface densities. The display on plant viral bionanoparticles may also lead to long-time stabilization of sensor molecules upon repeated uses and has the potential to increase sensor performance substantially, compared to conventional layouts. This has been demonstrated in different proof-of-concept biosensor devices. Therefore, richly available plant viral particles, non-pathogenic for animals or humans, might gain novel importance if applied in receptor layers of FEDs. These perspectives are explained and discussed with regard to future detection strategies for COVID-19 and related viral diseases.
Capacitive field‐effect biosensor applied for the detection of acetoin in alcoholic beverages and fermentation broths (2021)
Melanie Jablonski ; Felix Münstermann ; Jasmina Nork ; Denise Molinnus ; Lukas Muschallik ; Johannes Bongaerts ; Torsten Wagner ; Michael Keusgen ; Petra Siegert ; Michael Josef Schöning
An acetoin biosensor based on a capacitive electrolyte–insulator–semiconductor (EIS) structure modified with the enzyme acetoin reductase, also known as butane-2,3-diol dehydrogenase (Bacillus clausii DSM 8716ᵀ), is applied for acetoin detection in beer, red wine, and fermentation broth samples for the first time. The EIS sensor consists of an Al/p-Si/SiO₂/Ta₂O₅ layer structure with immobilized acetoin reductase on top of the Ta₂O₅ transducer layer by means of crosslinking via glutaraldehyde. The unmodified and enzyme-modified sensors are electrochemically characterized by means of leakage current, capacitance–voltage, and constant capacitance methods, respectively.
Capacitive Field-Effect Biosensor Studying Adsorption of Tobacco Mosaic Virus Particles (2021)
Melanie Jablonski ; Arshak Poghossian ; Robin Severin ; Michael Keusgen ; Christian Wege ; Michael Josef Schöning
Plant virus-like particles, and in particular, tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles, are increasingly being used in nano- and biotechnology as well as for biochemical sensing purposes as nanoscaffolds for the high-density immobilization of receptor molecules. The sensitive parameters of TMV-assisted biosensors depend, among others, on the density of adsorbed TMV particles on the sensor surface, which is affected by both the adsorption conditions and surface properties of the sensor. In this work, Ta₂O₅-gate field-effect capacitive sensors have been applied for the label-free electrical detection of TMV adsorption. The impact of the TMV concentration on both the sensor signal and the density of TMV particles adsorbed onto the Ta₂O₅-gate surface has been studied systematically by means of field-effect and scanning electron microscopy methods. In addition, the surface density of TMV particles loaded under different incubation times has been investigated. Finally, the field-effect sensor also demonstrates the label-free detection of penicillinase immobilization as model bioreceptor on TMV particles.
Detection of plant virus particles with a capacitive field-effect sensor (2021)
Melanie Jablonski ; Arshak Poghossian ; Michael Keusgen ; Christina Wege ; Michael Josef Schöning
Plant viruses are major contributors to crop losses and induce high economic costs worldwide. For reliable, on-site and early detection of plant viral diseases, portable biosensors are of great interest. In this study, a field-effect SiO2-gate electrolyte-insulator-semiconductor (EIS) sensor was utilized for the label-free electrostatic detection of tobacco mosaic virus (TMV) particles as a model plant pathogen. The capacitive EIS sensor has been characterized regarding its TMV sensitivity by means of constant-capacitance method. The EIS sensor was able to detect biotinylated TMV particles from a solution with a TMV concentration as low as 0.025 nM. A good correlation between the registered EIS sensor signal and the density of adsorbed TMV particles assessed from scanning electron microscopy images of the SiO2-gate chip surface was observed. Additionally, the isoelectric point of the biotinylated TMV particles was determined via zeta potential measurements and the influence of ionic strength of the measurement solution on the TMV-modified EIS sensor signal has been studied.
Light-Addressable Actuator-Sensor Platform for Monitoring and Manipulation of pH Gradients in Microfluidics: A Case Study with the Enzyme Penicillinase (2021)
Rene Welden ; Melanie Jablonski ; Christina Wege ; Michael Keusgen ; Patrick Hermann Wagner ; Torsten Wagner ; Michael Josef Schöning
The feasibility of light-addressed detection and manipulation of pH gradients inside an electrochemical microfluidic cell was studied. Local pH changes, induced by a light-addressable electrode (LAE), were detected using a light-addressable potentiometric sensor (LAPS) with different measurement modes representing an actuator-sensor system. Biosensor functionality was examined depending on locally induced pH gradients with the help of the model enzyme penicillinase, which had been immobilized in the microfluidic channel. The surface morphology of the LAE and enzyme-functionalized LAPS was studied by scanning electron microscopy. Furthermore, the penicillin sensitivity of the LAPS inside the microfluidic channel was determined with regard to the analyte’s pH influence on the enzymatic reaction rate. In a final experiment, the LAE-controlled pH inhibition of the enzyme activity was monitored by the LAPS.
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