Langmuir, Vol.23, No.18, 9487-9494, 2007
Morphology-dependent electrochemistry and electrocatalytical activity of cytochrome c
The morphology-dependent electrochemistry and electrocatalytical activity of cytochrome c (cyt. c) were investigated at pyramidal, rodlike, and spherical gold nanostructures directly electrodeposited onto sputtered gold surfaces. Direct, reversible electron transfer of cyt. c, for the first time, was realized at nanorod-like and nanopyramidal gold surfaces without any mediators or promoters, while no redox reaction was observed at the nanospherical gold electrode. The electrochemical properties of cyt. c vary with the shape of gold nanostructures with respect to the reversibility of electrode reactions, kinetic parameters, the formal potentials (E-0'), and charge-transport resistance (R-ct), suggesting shape-dependent mechanisms for the electrode reactions of cyt. c. The experimental results manifest that cyt. c was stably immobilized on the nanostructured gold electrodes with different conformational changes of the heme microenvironment. Consequently, not only the electroactivity, but also the inherent biological activity of the immobilized cyt. c strongly depended on the shape of the electrode surfaces. The facilitated electron transfer combined with the intrinsic catalytical activity of cyt. c substantially constructed a third-generation H2O2 biosensor with high selectivity, quick response time, large linear range, and good sensitivity. The electrocatalytical activity of the immobilized cyt. c toward H2O2 was also found to be morphology dependent, and the linear range of H2O2 detection could be tuned by means of employing the nanostructured gold surfaces with different shapes.