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Aggregation-Induced Electrochemiluminescence of Ir(ppy) 3 -Functionalized ZIF-8 for Microcystin-LR Detection via the trans -Cleavage Activity of CRISPR-Cas12a.

Binnan ShiYue JiaDehao JiaTian TianJingui ChenXiang RenJianping LeiHongying JiaHuan WangQin Wei
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
An efficient electrochemiluminescence (ECL) emitter, Ir(ppy) 3 -based molecules has recently been reported to exhibit aggregation-induced electrochemiluminescence (AIECL) phenomenon. However, it remains a significant challenge to control the aggregation states of these molecules and achieve uniform aggregates with intense ECL emission. In this work, a biosensor was developed to detect microcystin-LR (MC-LR) based on Ir(ppy) 3 -functionalized zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (Ir-ZIF-8) as the ECL emitter and the trans -cleavage activity of CRISPR-Cas12a as the methodological strategy. The Ir-ZIF-8, a functional metal-organic framework (MOF), exhibited the AIECL phenomenon via the spatial domain-limiting effect of encapsulating Ir(ppy) 3 into the mesopores of ZIF-8, while the porosity and highly ordered topological structure of ZIF-8 effectively limited the molecular motion of Ir(ppy) 3 . CRISPR-Cas12a was employed to indiscriminately cleave double-stranded DNA decorated with carboxy tetramethylrhodamine (TAMRA), which quenched the ECL signal of Ir-ZIF-8 by resonance energy transfer and then separated the quencher from Ir-ZIF-8 to reactivate the signal. The concentration of MC-LR was designed to correlate with both the quencher amount and the activity of Cas12a. Then, two linear regression equations for MC-LR detection were constructed to improve the accuracy of the biosensor, and the constructed biosensor showed remarkable reproducibility, stability, and selectivity. The accurate detection of MC-LR with limits of detection of 1.2 and 5.9 pg/mL was made possible by the high quenching efficiency of TAMRA and the effective cutting ability of the editable CRISPR-Cas12a system.
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