Biomolecules, Vol. 16, Pages 23: Electrochemical Choline Sensing: Biological Context, Electron Transfer Pathways and Practical Design Strategies

Fuente: Biomolecules - Revista científica (MDPI)
Biomolecules, Vol. 16, Pages 23: Electrochemical Choline Sensing: Biological Context, Electron Transfer Pathways and Practical Design Strategies
Biomolecules doi: 10.3390/biom16010023
Authors:
Angel A. J. Torriero
Sarah M. Thiak
Ashwin K. V. Mruthunjaya

Choline is a central metabolite that connects membrane turnover, neurotransmission, and one-carbon metabolism, and its reliable measurement across diverse biological matrices remains a significant analytical challenge. This review brings together biological context, electrochemical mechanisms, and device engineering to define realistic performance targets for choline sensors in blood, cerebrospinal fluid, extracellular space, and milk. We examine enzymatic sensor architectures ranging from peroxide-based detection to mediated electron transfer via ferrocene derivatives, quinones, and osmium redox polymers and assess how applied potential, oxygen availability, and film structure shape electron-transfer pathways. Evidence for direct electron transfer with choline oxidase is critically evaluated, with emphasis on the essential controls needed to distinguish true flavin-based communication from peroxide-related artefacts. We also examine bienzymatic formats that allow operation at low or negative bias and discuss strategies for matrix-matched validation, selectivity, drift control, and resistance to fouling. To support reliable translation, we outline reporting standards that include matrix-specific concentration ranges, reference electrode notation, mediator characteristics, selectivity panels, and access to raw electrochemical traces. By connecting biological requirements to mechanistic pathways and practical design considerations, this review provides a coherent framework for developing choline sensors that deliver stable, reproducible performance in real samples.