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Bioinspired Heterocoordination in Adaptable Cobalt Metal-Organic Framework for DNA Epigenetic Modification Detection.

Zhongyu WeiLong YuYumin FengZhiwen GanYongjin ShenShuang PengYuxiu Xiao
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) show unique advantages in simulating the dynamics and fidelity of natural coordination. Inspired by zinc finger protein, a second linker was introduced to affect the homogeneous MOF system and thus facilitate the emergence of diverse functionalities. Under the systematic identification of 12 MOF species (i.e., metal ions, linkers) and 6 second linkers (trigger), a dissipative system consisting of Co-BDC-NO 2 and o -phenylenediamine ( o PD) was screened out, which can rapidly and in situ generate a high photothermal complex (η = 36.9%). Meanwhile, both the carboxylation of epigenetic modifications and metal ion (Fe 3+ , Ni 2+ , Cu 2+ , Zn 2+ , Co 2+ and Mn 2+ ) screening were utilized to improve the local coordination environment so that the adaptable Co-MOF growth on the DNA strand was realized. Thus, epigenetic modification information on DNA was converted to an amplified metal ion signal, and then o PD was further introduced to generate bimodal dissipative signals by which a simple, high-sensitivity detection strategy of 5-hydroxymethylcytosine (LOD = 0.02%) and 5-formylcytosine (LOD = 0.025‰) was developed. The strategy provides one low-cost method (< 0.01 $/sample) for quantifying global epigenetic modifications, which greatly promotes epigenetic modification-based early disease diagnosis. This work also proposes a general heterocoordination design concept for molecular recognition and signal transduction, opening a new MOF-based sensing paradigm.
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