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Article
Determination of apparent amylose content in rice by using paper-based microfluidic chips Xianqiao Hu, Lin Lu, Changyun Fang, Binwu Duan, and Zhiwei Zhu J. Agric. Food Chem., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.jafc.5b04530 • Publication Date (Web): 23 Oct 2015 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on October 27, 2015
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Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry
Determination of apparent amylose content in rice by using paper-based microfluidic chips Xianqiao Hu1,2, Lin Lu1,2, Changyun Fang1,2, Binwu Duan1,2, Zhiwei Zhu1,2* 1
2
China National Rice Research Institute, Hangzhou 310006, China Laboratory of Quality & Safety Risk Assessment for Rice (Hangzhou), Ministry of
Agriculture *
Corresponding author. Tel.: +86 571 63370275; fax: +86 571 63370380. E-mail:
[email protected].
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Abstract
2
Determination of apparent amylose content in rice is a key function for rice
3
research and rice industry. In this paper, a novel approach with paper-based
4
microfluidic chip was reported to determine apparent amylose content in rice. The
5
conventional color reaction between amylose and iodine was employed. Blue color of
6
amylose-iodine complex generated on-chip was converted to gray and measured with
7
Photoshop after colored chip was scanned. The method for preparation of paper chip
8
was described. In-situ generation of iodine for on-chip color reaction was designed,
9
and factors influencing color reaction were investigated in detail. Elimination of
10
yellow color interference of excess iodine by exploiting color removal function of
11
Photoshop was presented. Under the optimized conditions, apparent amylose content
12
in rice ranging from 1.5-26.4 % can be determined, and precision was 6.3 %. The
13
analytical results obtained with developed approach were in good agreement to those
14
with continuous flow analyzer method.
15 16
Keywords: apparent amylose content, paper-based microfluidic chips, rice, color
17
reaction
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1. Introduction
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Starch is the major component of cereal. The quality of cereal depends on the
20
property of contained starch to a great extent. Starch consists of amylose and
21
amylopectin. Amylose content makes great impact on the property of starch such as
22
gelatinization, retrogradation, texture, solubility, swelling ability, crystallinity and so
23
on1. Rice is one of the most important staple foods for world population. The major
24
component of rice is starch, and the amylose content in rice starch ranges 0-30 %. The
25
texture of cooked rice and the functional properties of rice starch are primarily
26
impacted by amylose content. Amylose content negatively correlated with stickiness
27
and positively with hardness of rice. Cooked rice with high amylose content tend to
28
be dry, fluffy, hard and separate, while those with low amylose content tend to be
29
cohesive, tender and glossy2-3. Hence, amylose content in rice is an important quality
30
control parameter, and convenient and cost-effective method for the determination of
31
amylose content in rice is required by rice research and rice industry.
32
The conventional method used to determine amylose content in rice is
33
batch-wisecolorimetry4-7. It is based on the principle that amylose form a helical
34
inclusion bind with iodine, resulting in a blue color. The absorption of blue
35
amylose-iodine complex is measured at 620 nm or 720 nm with a spectrophotometer,
36
and amylose content is quantified against a calibration curve. The batch-wise
37
colorimetry consumes large amount of samples, reagents and labors, therefore, is
38
environment-unfriendly. Kaufman et al8 developed a 96-well plate method base on the
39
iodine binding principle for amylose content determination. It was capable of 3
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analyzing 50-100 samples of starch per day. Nowadays, automatic continuous flow
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analyzer has been employed for colorimetric determination of amylose content. The
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automatic analyzer greatly simplifies the labor-involved operation9, and improves the
43
precision of analytical results. However, the multi sample analysis is conducted in
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series sample by sample, therefore it is also time- and reagent consuming. Both the
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conventional batch-wise and continuous flow colorimetric methods require relatively
46
expensive equipment, therefore, can’t be conducted in-site. In addition to the
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colorimetry, many other instrumental methods have been reported to determine the
48
amylose content, such as electrochemical method10-12, concanavalin A precipitation
49
method13, high performance size exclusion chromatography9,
50
differential scanning calorimetry15, near-infrared reflectance (NIR) spectroscopy16-17,
51
thermogravimetricmethod18, multivariate calibration of the surface plasmon resonance
52
spectra of silver nanoparticles19 and so on. Expensive equipments are needed for these
53
methods. Recently, Khoomtong20 developed a portable amylose content meter for
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amylose content determination, needless of complicated and expensive equipment.
55
Besides of amylose, iodine also binds with long-chain amylopectin (DP > 60),
56
amylose content measured using colorimetry method and electrochemical method has
57
been termed apparent amylose content. However, apparent amylose content was also
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an important index to rice quality, and apparent amylose content instead of exact
59
amylose content were widely used in rice research and rice industry.
14
, modulated
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Since the first report on paper-based microfluidic analytical chip (paper chip)
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was published in 200721, the paper chips have attracted great interest22-23 because they 4
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possess advantages such as cheap, biocompatible, easy-to-use, portable, needless of
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expensive equipments including fluid-driving pumps, consuming less sample and
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reagents, etc. When paper chip based analysis relied on a color reaction, the color
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intensity can be read out by naked eye or by a computer after the image of paper chip
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was taken by a mobile-phone-equipped camera or a scanner. Thus, it is possible for
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chemical and biochemical analyses to be implemented in site or in remote places. A
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variety of paper chips have been developed for food analysis, medical diagnosis and
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environmental monitoring22-27. However, no work has been reported on the
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development of paper chips for rice quality analysis. Recently, He et al28-30 reported
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novel and facile techniques to fabricate paper chips by means of coupling
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hydrophobic silane to paper fibers followed by deep UV lithography or plasma
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treatment. Such prepared paper chips have been applied in the colorimetric assays of
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nitrite ions in food samples28 and glucose in whole blood29.
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This work reported a novel paper-chip based approach for the determination of
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apparent amylose content in rice samples. Reliable on-chip color reaction between
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amylose and iodine was realized by in-situ generation of iodine. The interference of
78
excess iodine in amylose assay was eliminated via exploiting the function of
79
Photoshop software. The method for preparation of paper chips for the assays was
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presented.
81 82
2. Materials and methods
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2.1 Samples and materials 5
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Nine rice samples and four rice standards were provided by Rice Product Quality
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Supervision and Inspection Center, Ministry of Agriculture, China. The four rice
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standards contain 1.5%, 10.4 %, 16.2 % and 26.4 % apparent amylose, respectively.
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Before testing, samples were husked in according to the standard of GB/T
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5495-200831. Briefly, the sprout gain was selected out of the sample and husked with
89
hands while others were husked with rice huller. After that, the husked rice was milled
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until that most of the bran and part of the embryo had been removed. Then, milled
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rice kernels were ground into flour by using a Cyclotec 1093 Sample Mill (Foss
92
Tecator, Sweden). After sieved with a 0.18 mm sieve, the samples of rice flour were
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equilibrated with rice standards in air for 3 d before use.
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2.2 Fabrication of the paper chip
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The native paper chip for determination of apparent amylose content was
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prepared as described in reference 28 and 29 with some modifications. Briefly,
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Whatman quantitative filter paper (Hangzhou Whatman-Xinhua Filter Paper Co., Ltd,
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Hangzhou) was immersed in a 0.1 % (v/v) octadecyltrichlorosilane (OTS, Acros
99
Organics, Springfield, NJ) solution in n-hexane for 5 min at room temperature.
100
During this process, filter paper turned from hydrophilic to hydrophobic as the
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long-chain alkyl groups of OTS were coupled to cellulose fibers of paper via
102
silanization reaction. The filter paper was removed from OTS solution, and rinsed
103
sequentially with n-hexane and water. After dried under nitrogen stream, the
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OTS-treated paper was cut into small sheets of 2.5 cm × 2.5 cm. An OTS-treated
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paper sheet was then sandwiched in a PMMA-PDMS-hybrid mold29 with a 6
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flower-shaped channel network (Fig.1a) and clamped. The complex was put into the
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chamber of a plasma cleaner (model of PDC-32G-2, Harrick, NY, USA) and exposed
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to the plasma for 30 s. The plasma-exposed region (i.e. the channel network) of paper
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sheet resumed hydrophilic due to the conversion of long alkyl chains to hydrophilic
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moieties
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wettability-patterned paper sheet was rinsed sequentially with n-hexane and water.
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After dried in air, a portion of 10 µL indicator solution (containing30 mmol·L-1
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potassium iodide (KI) and 30 mmol·L-1 sodium carbonate (Na2CO3)) was pipetted into
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the central zone (Fig.1b). The indicator solution penetrated through hydrophilic
115
channels into detection zones under the action of capillary force (Fig.1c). After dried
116
in air, the paper chip with indicator precursor (KI-Na2CO3) was stored under room
117
temperature and ready for use.
118
2.3 Determination of apparent amylose content with the paper chip
during
plasma
treatment.
After
withdrawing
from
mold,
the
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A 100.0 mg portion of either sample flour or standard flour was weighted, mixed
120
and homogenized with 1.0 mL 95 % ethanol solution. 9 mL of 1mol·L-1NaOH
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solution was then added. The suspended flour solution was boiled for 10 min. After
122
cooling to room temperature, the solution was transferred to a 50 mL volumetric flask,
123
and diluted with deionized water to the volume.
124
During assay, 0.5 µL portions of either standard solutions or sample solutions
125
were individually pipetted into detection zones of paper chip prepared as section 2.2
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(Fig.1d). After the spots on chip dried in air, 10 µL oxidant solution (containing 60
127
mmol·L-1 hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), 200 mmol·L-1 acetic acid (HAc)) were pipetted 7
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into the central zone of chip (Fig.1e). The oxidant solution penetrated through
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channels into each of eight detection zones, where color reaction between apparent
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amylose and iodine was induced by the oxidant (Fig.1f). Twenty minutes later, paper
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chip was scanned with a desktop scanner. The collected image was processed with
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Adobe Photoshop to obtain the gray intensity of blue color developed in each
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detection zone. Thus, the image of paper chip was opened in the Adobe Photoshop as
134
the top layer. Underneath of top layer, an image of fully white filter paper sheet was
135
then opened as the bottom layer. With the tool of color selection, the yellow color on
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top layer was selected with appropriate tolerance level, then deleted. The
137
yellow-color-removed image was finally converted to grayscale. The bottom fully
138
white layer was used to prevent the black-white chess-board background of
139
Photoshop from appearing in the yellow-color-removed region of top layer. A
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calibration curve was constructed based on measured gray intensities of detection
141
zones for standards, and apparent amylose content in sample solution was read against
142
the calibration curve. Three repeated measurements were performed for each sample.
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2.4 Determination of apparent amylose content with continuous-flow analyzer
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The preparation of sample solutions was almost the same as section 2.3 except
145
that the amounts of both flour samples and added reagents were halved. The prepared
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standard and sample solutions were analyzed with a continuous-flow analyzer (Flow
147
solution IV, OI Analytical) according to manufacturer instruction.
148 149
3. Results and discussion 8
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3.1 Method development In preliminary tests, original paper sheets without subjecting to any treatment
152
were used. A brown-colored triiodide ion (I3-) solution (containing 8 mmol·L-1 iodine,
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120 mmol·L-1KI,100 mmol·L-1HAc) was pipetted on the paper sheet (Fig.2a), leaving
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a yellow spot on the sheet. Then sample solution containing amylose was pipetted
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onto the yellow-colored spot. The yellow color was soon turned to slightly blue due to
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bonding of iodine to amylose (Fig.2b). The gray intensity of scanned image of blue
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spot was in proportion to the concentration of apparent amylose. However, the iodine
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deposited on paper sheet sublimed quickly. As shown in Fig.2c, the yellow color of
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iodine was almost invisible 5 min after triiodide ion solution pipetted onto the sheet.
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If the sample solution was pipetted onto the spot 5 min after triiodide solution had
161
been applied, the intensity of final blue color was much lighter (Fig.2b and d),
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indicating that the time interval between reagent application and sample application
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was a crucial parameter that would seriously affect the accuracy and precision of
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analytical results. The sublimation property of iodine prevented triiodide ion solution
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from being pre-applied onto paper sheets before use.
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To overcome this problem, we designed a protocol that iodine was in-situ
167
chemically generated on paper chip when it was required. Thus, KI solution rather
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than triiodide solution was pre-applied onto paper sheet. Then sample solution was
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pipetted onto paper sheet. To induce the color reaction, H2O2 solution serving as the
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oxidant was added onto sheet following sample addition. Upon addition of
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H2O2solution, iodide was in-situ oxidized to iodine (Reaction 1) which would 9
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immediately bind to amylose, resulting in a blue color (Reaction 2). With this protocol,
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we did detect amylose without the trouble of iodine sublimation (Fig.3). Nevertheless,
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another problem arose, the KI pre-applied on paper sheet would be gradually oxidized
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to I2 by the oxygen in the air (Reaction 3). Test showed that a KI-applied paper sheet,
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which had been soaked with 30 mmol·L-1 KI for 3 s and dried at a temperature of 45
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ºC, turned slightly yellowish after 1 d storage in the air. Reaction 1
178 179
Amylose + I2 (yellow) = Amylose-I2 complex (blue)
Reaction 2
Reaction 3
180 181
Half-reaction 1
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Half-reaction 2
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Half-reaction 3
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The Nernst equation for Half-reaction 1 is shown by Equation 1:
185
EI
186
− 2 /I
2 0. 0592 V l g I − 2
= EI0 /I − − 2
Eq. 1
where EI0 /I − = 0.5345 V 2
187 188 189
The potential EI
/I −
does not affected by the acidity of reaction medium. Under
the condition of 30 mmol·L-1 KI concentration, EI
2
/I −
is 0.6246 V.
The Nernst equation for Half-reaction 2 is shown by Equation 2:
EO
2 /H 2 O
= E
4 0. 0592 0. 0592 V l g H + + V l g p( O2 ) / p 0 4 4 0. 0592 − 0. 0592VpH + V l g p( O2 ) / p 0 4
= EO0
190 0 O2 /H 2 O
191
2
2 /H 2 O
+
where EO0 2/H2O = 1.229 V , p( O2 ) / p 0=0. 21 10
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The potential EO0
2
strongly depends on the pH value. Calculation reveals that
/H 2 O
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I- would be oxidized by O2 in the air when pH of reaction medium is less than 10.2.
194
This explains the reason why KI-soaked paper sheet gradually turned yellow after a
195
short period storage in air. The KI-applied paper sheet became totally invalid after one
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week storage (Fig.3b). To suppress the oxidization of KI by oxygen, 30mmol·L-1
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Na2CO3 was add into KI solution to make the solution alkaline (pH>10.8). Under this
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condition, Reaction 3 can’t proceed spontaneously, consequently, KI-applied paper
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sheet becomes stable in the air.
200
The Nernst Equation for Half-reaction 3 is:
201
EH 2O 2 /H 2O = EH0 2O 2 /H 2O +
202 203
0.0592 V lg[H + ]2 = EH0 2O 2 /H 2O − 0.0592VpH 2
where EH0 2O2/H2O = 1.77 V Calculation of potential with Eq.3 indicates than EH O
2 2
204
Eq.3
/H 2 O
is no less than 0.94 V
in the pH range of 1-14. Compared with the above calculated result for EI
2
/I −
,
205
Reaction 1 would proceed in the pH range of 1-14. Thus, the on-paper applied I-
206
would be oxidized to iodine by H2O2 in Na2CO3 medium. Unfortunately, no yellow
207
color of iodine was observed after H2O2 solution was pipetted onto the paper sheet on
208
which KI-Na2CO3 solution had been applied (Fig.4a). This might be ascribed to that
209
in-situ generated iodine subjected to disproportionation (Reaction 4) in alkaline
210
medium. Reaction 4
211 212
Therefore, acid should be added to oxidant solution to create an acidic reaction
213
medium for depression of iodine disproportionation in one hand, and for facilitating 11
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the reaction of iodine binding to amylose (usually carried out in the pH range of 4-6)
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in the other hand. The color reaction did occur when 50 mmol L-1acetic acid was
216
added to H2O2 solution. Tests also showed that on-paper color reaction of amylose
217
was successfully implemented after KI-Na2CO3-applied paper sheet had been stored
218
for 3 months (Fig.3c and d), indicating the high stability of KI-Na2CO3-paper sheet.
219
3.2 Factors influencing the color intensity
220
The concentration of iodide in indicator solution and those of hydrogen peroxide
221
and acetic acid in oxidant reagent solution would influence the color reaction. Their
222
effects were investigated with paper-based microfluidic chips.
223
3.2.1 KI concentration
224
The influence of KI concentration on the color reaction was shown in Fig.4a. For
225
reagent blank, the mean gray intensity of yellow color in detection zone was steadily
226
increased with the increase of KI concentration. For rice sample, however, the mean
227
intensity in detection zone increased quickly with the increase of KI concentration up
228
to 30 mmol·L-1, then slowly increased up to the tested highest KI concentration (120
229
mmol·L-1). By subtracting the mean intensity for reagent blank from that for rice
230
sample, the net mean intensity for rice sample reached a maximal value at the KI
231
concentration of 30 mmol·L-1. Therefore, 30 mmol·L-1 KI in the indicator solution was
232
selected in the present work.
233
3.2.2 HAc concentration
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The influence of acetic acid concentration on the color reaction is shown in
235
Fig.4b. For reagent blank, slight yellow color appeared when HAc concentration in 12
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oxidant solution was higher than 10 mmol·L-1, indicating the formation of significant
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amount of iodine on detection zone. The mean gray intensity of yellow color in
238
detection zone increased with the increase of HAc concentration and reached a
239
plateau at the HAc concentration of 400 mmol·L-1. For rice sample containing 26.4%
240
apparentamylose, slight blue color was observed when HAc concentration was higher
241
than 50 mmol·L-1. The mean gray intensity for rice sample sharply increased with the
242
increase of HAc concentration up to 400 mmol·L-1, then it leveled off. Subtracting of
243
mean gray intensity for reagent blank from that for rice sample resulted in the net
244
mean gray intensity for amylose-iodine complex. As showed in Fig.4b, the net mean
245
gray intensity for amylose-iodine complex quickly increased with the increase of HAc
246
concentration up to 200 mmol·L-1 then slightly decreased with the increase of HAc
247
concentration, the highest value being obtained at the HAc concentration of 200
248
mmol·L-1. At the HAc concentration higher than 200 mmol·L-1, much more iodine was
249
produced, consequently, dark yellow colored area in detection zone expanded. Thus,
250
HAc concentration of 200 mmol·L-1 in oxidant solution was adopted in the following
251
work.
252
3.2.3 H2O2 concentration
253
The H2O2 concentration in oxidant solution had little impact on the mean
254
intensities for both reagent blank and rice sample when concentration ratio of
255
H2O2-to-KI was within the range of 1:2-5:1. In this work, a H2O2 concentration of 60
256
mmol·L-1 was applied.
257
3.3 Determination of apparent amylose content in rice sample 13
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3.3.1 Data preprocessing
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A paper-based microfluidic chip with a flower shaped channel network,
260
including one central reagent zone and eight detection zones where sample solutions
261
would be individually added, was employed for the determination of apparent
262
amylose content in rice. Among eight detection zones, one was for reagent blank, four
263
for rice standards, and the rest three for rice samples. On-chip color reaction in eight
264
detection zones was simultaneously proceeded as described in Section 2.3, and the
265
mean gray intensity of each detection zone was sequentially measured via Photoshop
266
software after paper chip was scanned by a desktop scanner. As both yellow color of
267
excess iodine and blue color of amylose-iodine complex were converted gray intensity,
268
the contribution of yellow color to gray intensity would interfere with amylose
269
determination. When the measured mean gray intensities for standards were plotted
270
via apparent amylose contents in standards, the data were significantly dispersed from
271
the linear regressed (Fig.S1a), the linear correlation coefficient R was only 0.9275.
272
Thus, the interference of yellow color of excess iodine should be corrected from total
273
gray intensity. It was simply implemented by removal of yellow color in scanned
274
image via the color selection function of Adobe Photoshop (see Section 2.3). Then,
275
the corrected image without yellow color was converted to grayscale with Photoshop
276
software. After correcting the yellow color interference, the data of measured mean
277
gray intensities against apparent amylose contents gave excellent linearity (Fig.S1b,
278
R=0.9998), demonstrating the effectiveness of removal of yellow color interference
279
via Photoshop software. 14
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3.3.2 Performance of the developed paper-based microfluidic chip
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Analytical performance of the developed paper chip method was evaluated with
282
real rice samples. With a rice sample containing 16.2 % apparent amylose, precision
283
of three parallel measurements conducted in the same paper chip was 6.3 % in relative
284
standard deviation (RSD). The chip-to-chip difference was examined with three chips
285
of the same batch, and RSD of 6.0 % was observed for intra-day tests while RSD of
286
10.7 % (n=3) was observed for inter-day tests. Quite good linearity (R=0.9998) of
287
calibration curve was obtained in the apparent amylose content range of 1.5-26.4 %
288
which covers apparent amylose contents in most rice samples (Fig.S1b). The achieved
289
detection limit (3σ) for the developed paper chip method was 1.1 %.
290
The accuracy of present method was evaluated by comparing analytical results
291
obtained with paper chip approach to those obtained with continuous-flow analyzer
292
method based on NY/T 55-1987 which is the standard of Ministry of Agriculture of
293
China. The correspondence between the results of developed paper-based microfluidic
294
chip method and continuous-flow analyzer was showed in Fig.S2. The results of
295
developed method were consistent with those of continuous-flow analyzer method for
296
determining apparent amylose content in rice sample. The difference between
297
developed method and continuous-flow analyzer method were less 3 % except for the
298
sample with apparent amylose content of 17.1% whose difference was 4.5 %. The
299
signal precisions were quite good, standard deviations of less than 3 % were observed
300
for test rice samples. Despite that the precision of developed paper chip approach is
301
poorer than that of continuous flow analyzer method whose standard deviations were 15
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less than 1%, the developed method does possess such advantages as cost-effective,
303
needless of expensive equipment and skilled analysts, and capable of in-site assays.
304
Although this method could not be a direct replacement for the standard method, it’s
305
quite suitable for amylose-based rice screen assay that can be conducted in common
306
laboratories.
307 308
4. Conclusion
309
A paper-based microfluidic chip for determining apparent amylose content in
310
rice samples has been developed based on conventional color reaction between
311
amylose and iodine and measuring gray intensity of scanned image of colored paper
312
chip. To prevent iodine from sublimation away from paper chips, iodine needs to be in
313
situ produced on chip via oxidizing pre-applied KI with H2O2. Acidity control is the
314
key for on-chip iodine generation and color reaction. The KI solution is kept slight
315
alkaline by adding Na2CO3 to suppress the oxidation of I- by O2 in the air after KI
316
have been pre-applied on chip. This allows prepared paper chips to be effective after 3
317
months storage. Spiking of acetic acid into oxidant solution ensures in-situ iodine
318
generation and followed color reaction to properly conducted. Removal of yellow
319
color of excess iodine from scanned image of paper chip by using color selection
320
function of Photoshop software ensures the measured gray intensity be purely
321
contributed by blue amylose-iodine complex. The developed paper chip approach has
322
the advantages of cost-effective, needless of expensive equipment and skilled analysts,
323
and capable of in-site assays. It is most suitable for evaluation of amylose content in 16
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the screening tests for scientific research and breeding programs. It is also potential to
325
extend the developed method to assay of amylose content in other cereals.
326 327 328
Acknowledgment
329
This work was funded by the Special Fund of Chinese Central Government for
330
Basic Scientific Research Operations in Commonweal Research Institutes (project No.
331
2014RG006-4), Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China(grant NO.
332
LQ15C200007), National Natural Science Foundation of China (project No.
333
31201175) and National Key Project for Agro-product Quality & Safety Risk
334
Assessment, P.R.C. (project No. GJFP2014006).
335 336 337
Supporting Information
338
Figure S1 showed the calibration curves constructed with the measured gray
339
intensities for four rice standards before and after removing yellow color, and Figure
340
S2 showed the comparison between the results of developed paper-based microfluidic
341
chip method and continuous flow analyzer method for 9 rice samples. This material is
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available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.
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Corona Treater, Master Thesis, Zhejiang University (2014).
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Figure Captions
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Figure 1 Schematic diagrams for the process of determining apparent amylose content
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with developed paper-based microfluidic chip. (a) the prepared paper-based
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microfluidic chip with flower-shaped hydrophilic channel network; (b) 10 µL
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indicator solution was pipetted into central zone;(c) the applied indicator solution
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penetrated through hydrophilic channels into detection zones; (d) 0.5 µL portions of
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sample solutions were individually pipetted into each of eight detection zones; (e) a
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10 µL portion of oxidant solution was pipetted into central zone; (f) color reaction
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occurred in detection zones.
445 446
Figure 2 The effect of iodine sublimation on color reaction carried out on paper sheets.
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(a) 1 µL triiodide solution was dropped on the paper sheet; (b) 1 µL rice standard
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solution was pipetted onto (a); (c) 5min after triiodide solution was dropped on the
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paper sheet; (d) 1 µL rice standard solution was pipetted onto (c).
450 451
Figure 3 Color reaction carried out on indicator solution pre-applied paper sheets.
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(a-b) the indicator solution containing KI only; (c-d) the indicator solution containing
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KI and Na2CO3; (a, c) amylose solution was pipetted onto the paper sheets
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immediately after indicator solution had been applied; (b) amylose solution was
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pipetted onto the paper sheet 7 days after indicator solution had been applied; (d)
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amylose solution was pipetted onto the paper sheet 3 months after alkaline indicator 23
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solution had been applied.
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Figure 4 Influence of KI concentration in indicator solution (a) and HAc
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concentration in oxidant solution (b) on the measured gray intensity of detection
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zones. (-■-) the gray intensity measured for rice sample; (-●-) the gray intensity
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measured for reagent blank; (-▲-) the net gray intensity for rice sample. H2O2
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concentration in oxidant solution: 60 mmol·L-1; (a) HAc concentration in oxidant
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solution: 200 mmol·L-1; (b) KI concentration in indicator solution: 30 mmol·L-1.
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