Journal Article10.1002/adma.202211724
Current Advances on the Single-Atom Nanozyme and its Bio-Applications.
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TL;DR: In this paper , a review of single-atom nano-zymes (SAzymes) is presented, focusing on the three parts including the synthesis approaches for the preparation of SAzymes, catalysis modulation strategies and biomedical applications.
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Abstract: Artificial enzymes designed with high catalytic efficiency and stability hold great potential to develop the promising surrogates for naturally-occurring enzymes. Nanozymes, a class of nanomaterials mimicking the function of enzymes, have aroused much attention as the candidate in diverse fields with the arbitrarily tunable features owing to the diversity of crystalline nanostructures, composition, and surface configurations. However, the uncertainty of their active sites and the lower intrinsic deficiencies of nanomaterials-initiated catalysis compared with the natural enzymes promote the pursing of alternatives by imitating the biological active centers. Single-atom nanozymes (SAzymes) maximize the atom utilization with the well-defined structure, providing an important bridge to investigate mechanism and the relationship between structure and catalytic activity. They have risen as the new burgeoning alternative to the natural enzyme from in vitro bioanalytical tool to in vivo therapy owing to the flexible atomic engineering structure. In this review, we mainly focus on the three parts including the synthesis approaches for the preparation of SAzymes, catalysis modulation strategies and biomedical applications of SAzymes. Firstly, a detailed overview of single-atom catalyst synthesis strategies including bottom-up and top-down approaches is given. Then, according to the structural feature of single atom nanocatalysts, the influence factors such as central metal atom, coordination number, heteroatom doping, and the metal-support interaction are discussed. And the representative biological applications (including anti-bacterial/anti-viral performance, cancer therapy and biosensing) are highlighted. In the end, the future perspective and challenge facing are demonstrated. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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Citations
Single-atom nanozymes shines diagnostics of gastrointestinal diseases
Sijia Hua,Qiuxia Peng,Xiaofeng Zhang,Jianfeng Yang +3 more
TL;DR: Single-atom nanozymes, with their unique metal coordination structure, are emerging as a potent diagnostic tool for gastrointestinal diseases, offering enhanced catalytic activity and bioenzyme-like properties through optimized design and synthesis strategies.
Single‐Atom Iridium Nanozyme‐Based Persistent Luminescence Nanoparticles for Multimodal Imaging‐Guided Combination Tumor Therapy
Yang Li,Shuqi Wu,Nan Fang,Wei Deng,Kaixuan Li,Nur Jarhen,Yitong Zhou,Wei Ma,Yuanyuan Qu,Chaoxiang Chen,Yujing Ren,Xue‐Bo Yin +11 more
TL;DR: Researchers develop single-atom iridium nanozyme-based persistent luminescence nanoparticles for multimodal imaging-guided combination tumor therapy, combining photothermal, chemodynamic, and computed tomography capabilities with targeting and biocompatibility for effective, drug-free treatment.
Printed Soft Electronic Skin Based on a Dual-Atom Nanozyme for Multiplexed Epidermal Sensing
Yuanyuan Chen,Jingqi Li,Jingyao Song,Yiru Zhou,Yi Lu,Luo Xinran,Guo-hui Wang,Hongqi Jiang,Dongmei Deng,Liqiang Luo,You Yu,Yuanyuan Chen,Jingqi Li,Jingyao Song,Yiru Zhou,Yi Lu,Luo Xinran,Guo-hui Wang,Hongqi Jiang,Dongmei Deng,Liqiang Luo,You Yu +21 more
Abstract: The development of soft electronic skin with various biosensors is critical for healthcare monitoring and personalized medicine at the molecular level. For the sensing capabilities, biosensors with natural enzymes are integrated into the electronic skin, aimed at high efficiency, selectivity, and biocompatibility. However, this integration results in high costs, poor stability under harsh conditions, and challenges in storage. Here, we introduce a dual-atom nanozyme as the epidermal catalyst, which shows high selectivity, long-term stability, and enhanced tolerance to temperature and pH variations within the reaction media. With the integration of multimodal sensors, microfluidics, and flexible circuits, the sensing e-skin enables noninvasive, continuous tracking of sweat biomarkers and physiological states. This sensing electronic skin with long-term health monitoring could substantially extend wearable healthcare technology and pave the way to more practical applications.
HPRR-Based Diatomic Catalyst Electrochemistry Biosensor for Detecting Cancer-Related Extracellular Vesicles
Wei Du,Mingxuan Zhou,Guancheng Wang,Mingze Lu,Xiao Wang,Zhirui Guo,Ming Ma,Yu Zhang +7 more
TL;DR: Researchers developed a diatomic catalyst electrochemistry biosensor using HPRR-based technology to detect cancer-related extracellular vesicles, leveraging their biomarker potential for cancer diagnosis and providing a novel tool for early disease detection.
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