Reusable electronic tongue based on transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 nanodisc-conjugated graphene field-effect transistor for a spiciness-related pain evaluation

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Title
Reusable electronic tongue based on transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 nanodisc-conjugated graphene field-effect transistor for a spiciness-related pain evaluation
Author(s)
Sung Eun Seo; Seong Gi Lim; Kyung Ho Kim; Jinyeong Kim; C J Shin; Soomin Kim; Lina Kim; S H Lee; Song Yee JangHyun Woo Oh; H A Lee; W K Kim; Y M Park; K G Lee; S H Lee; S Ha; Oh Seok Kwon
Bibliographic Citation
Advanced Materials, vol. 35, no. 19, pp. 2206198-2206198
Publication Year
2023
Abstract
The sense of spiciness is related to the stimulation of vanilloid compounds contained in the foods. Although, the spiciness is commonly considered as the part of taste, it is more classified to the sense of pain stimulated on a tongue, namely, pungency, which is described as a tingling or burning on the tongue. Herein, first, a reusable electronic tongue based on a transient receptor potential vanilloid 1 (TRPV1) nanodisc conjugated graphene field-effect transistor is fabricated and spiciness-related pain evaluation with reusable electrode is demonstrated. The pungent compound reactive receptor TRPV1 is synthesized in the form of nanodiscs to maintain stability and reusability. The newly developed platform shows highly selective and sensitive performance toward each spiciness related vanilloid compound repeatably: 1 aM capsaicin, 10 aM dihydrocapsaicin, 1 fM piperine, 10 nM allicin, and 1 pM AITC. The binding mechanism is also examined by simulation. Furthermore, the elimination of the burning sensation on the tongue after eating spicy foods is not investigated. Based on the synthesis of micelles composed of casein protein (which is contained in skim milk) that remove pungent compounds bound to TRPV1 nanodisc, the deactivation of TRPV1 is investigated, and the electrode is reusable that mimics electronic tongue.
ISSN
0935-9648
Publisher
Wiley
Full Text Link
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/adma.202206198
Type
Article
Appears in Collections:
Division of Research on National Challenges > Infectious Disease Research Center > 1. Journal Articles
Division of Bio Technology Innovation > Core Research Facility & Analysis Center > 1. Journal Articles
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