|
|
Digital Printing of Enzymes on Textile Substrates as Functional Materials
|
School of Fashion and Textile, RMIT University, 25 Dawson St., Brunswick 3056 Melbourne, Australia
Materials Science and Engineering, CSIRO, Clayton 3168, Australia
|
|
|
Abstract Recently, there have been significant developments in inkjet printing for applications in various fields
such as medicine, biomaterials and sensors. In this research, enzymes like horseradish peroxidase (HRP)
and glucose oxidase (GOx) were directly printed by inkjet printer onto flexible textile fabric in predefined
patterns to produce a functional material. The functionality of the printed enzymes (bioink) was
investigated by chemical reaction after printing fresh and stored bio-ink in a digital printer. The results
indicated that these enzymes can be effectively printed individually or in combination, which retains
their functionality after printing. Furthermore, HRP was coupled and printed with fluorescent group,
the result confirmed that the printed enzyme was still active and retained its functionality despite the
printing process. Hence, the digital printing technique can be used as a novel method for producing
functional textiles for advanced applications in monitoring health and security.
|
|
|
|
|
Cite this article: |
Navdeep Bal,Shadi Houshyar,Yuan Gao, et al. Digital Printing of Enzymes on Textile Substrates as Functional Materials
[J]. Journal of Fiber Bioengineering and Informatics, 2014, 7(4): 595-602.
|
|
[1] Calvert P. Inkjet printing for materials and devices. Chemistry of Materials; 2001, 13(10): 3299-
3055.
[2] Lauer L, Ingebrandt S, Scholl M, O®enhausser A. Aligned microcontact printing of biomolecules
on microelectronic device surfaces. IEEE Transactions on Biomedical Engineering, 2001; 48(7):
838-842.
[3] Martinez AW, Phillips ST, Butte MJ, Whitesides GM. Patterned paper as a platform for in-
expensive, low-volume, portable bioassays. Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2007; 46:
1318-1320.
[4] Newman JD, Turner APF. Home blood glucose biosensors: a commercial perspective. Biosensors
and Bioelectronics, 2005; 20: 2435-2453.
[5] Khan MS, Fon D, Li X, Tian J, Forsythe J, Garnier G, Shen W. Biosurface engineering through
ink jet printing. Colloids and Surface B: Biointerfaces, 2010; 75(1): 441-447.
[6] Zhang C, Fang K. Surface modification of polyester fabrics for inkjet printing with atmospheric-
pressure air/ar plasma. Surface and Coating Technology, 2009; 203: 2058-2063.
[7] Risio SD, Yan N. Piezoelectric ink-jet printing of horseradish peroxidase: effect of ink viscosity
modifiers on activity. Molecular Rapid Communications, 2007; 28(18-19): 1934-1940.
[8] Cook BS, Shamim A. Inkjet printing of novel wideband and high gain antennas on low-cost paper
substrate. Antennas and Propagation, IEEE Transactions on, 2012; 60(9): 4148-4156.
[9] Pardo L, Cris WJW, Boland T. Characterization of patterned self-assembled monolayers and
protein arrays generated by the ink-jet method. Langmuir, 2003; 19: 1462-1466.
[10] Tian J, Shen W. Printing enzymatic reactions. Chemical Communications, 2011; 47: 1583-1585.
[11] Barbulovic-Nad I, Lucente M, Sun Y, Zhang M, Wheeler AR, Bussmann M. Bio-microarray fab-
rication techniques: a review. Critical Reviews in Biotechnology, 2006; 26(4): 237-259.
[12] Kokol V, Heine E. E®ective textile printing using di®erent enzyme systems. Coloration Technology,
2005; 121: 208-215.
[13] King AG. Research Advances. Journal of Chemical Education, 2008; 85(4): 478-481.
[14] Creran B. Detection of bacteria using inkjet-printed enzymatic test strips. Applied Materials and
Interfaces, 2014. DOI: 10.1021/am505689g
[15] Li X, Bradley D, Chang SK, Daniel FM, Vincent MR. Paper based blood typing device that reports
patient's blood type "in writing". Angewandte Chemie International Edition, 2012. 51(22): 5497-
5501.
[16] Abe K. et al., Inkjet-printed paper fluidic immuno-chemical sensing device. Analytical and Bioan-
alytical Chemistry, 2010. 398(2): p. 885-893.
[17] Elsharkawy M, Schutzius TM, Megaridis CM. Inkjet patterned superhydrophobic paper for open-
air surface microfluidic devices. Lab on a Chip, 2014. 14(6): p. 1168-1175.
[18] Li X, Ballerini DR, Shen W. A perspective on paper-based micro°uidics: current status and future
trends. Biomicrofluidics, 2012. 6(1): p. 011301.
[19] Hoppmann EP, Yu WW, White IM. Inkjet printed fluidic paper devices for chemical and biological
analytics using surface enhanced raman spectroscopy. Selected Topics in Quantum Electronics,
IEEE Journal of, 2014. 20(3): p. 1-10.
[20] Josephy PD, Eling, Mason RP. The horseradish peroxidase-catalyzed oxidation of 3, 5, 3', 5'-
tetramethylbenzidine. Free radical and charge-transfer complex intermediates. Journal of Biologi-
cal Chemistry, 1982. 257(7): 3669-3675.
602 N. Bal et al. / Journal of Fiber Bioengineering and Informatics 7:4 (2014) 595{602
[21] Li X, Tian J, Garnier G, Shen W. Fabrication of paper-based micro°uidic sensors by printing.
Colloids and Surfaces B: Biointerfaces, 2010; 76(2): 564-570.
[22] Ballerini DR, X Li, W Shen. Patterned paper and alternative materials as substrates for low-cost
micro°uidic diagnostics. Micro°uidics and Nano°uidics, 2012. 13(5): p. 769-787.
[23] Welinder KG. Plant peroxidase: the primary, secondary and tertiary structures and relation to
cytochrome c peroxidase. Eur. J. Bioochem, 1979; 96(3): 483-502.
[24] Nagata R, Yokoyama K, Durliat H, Comtat M, Clark SA. An enzyme-containing ink for screen-
printed glucose sensors. Electroanalysis, 1995; 7(11): 1027-1031.
[25] Veitch NC. Horseradish peroxidase: a modern view of a classic enzyme. Photochemistry, 2004;
65(3): 249-259.
|
|
|
|