Electrochemical Analysis of Target-Induced Hairpin-Mediated Aptamer Sensors.
Shao SuJianfeng MaYongqiang XuHemeng PanDan ZhuJie ChaoLixing WengLian-Hui WangPublished in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2020)
The state of probe DNA at the biosensing interface greatly affects the detection performance of electrochemical DNA biosensors. Herein, we constructed a target-induced hairpin-mediated biosensing interface to study the effect of probe DNA on the analytical performance of adenosine triphosphate aptamer (ATPA) and adenosine triphosphate (ATP) detection. Moreover, we also explored the electrochemical contribution of the coexisting hairpin and double-stranded DNA (dsDNA) to this sensing interface. Experimental results suggested that the molecular recognition ability and detection performance of the biosensing interface were majorly dependent on the surface density of methylene blue (MB)-labeled probe hairpin DNA and partly affected by the spatial state of the formed dsDNA. When the surface density of hairpin DNA was moderate (5.72 pmol cm-2), this sensing interface determined as low as 0.74 fM ATPA and 5.04 pM ATP with high selectivity and excellent regeneration, respectively. Furthermore, we calculated that the formed dsDNA had a 31.87% contribution in the total electrochemical signal for 10 pM ATPA detection. Based on the above results, we designed an XOR logic gate based on the biosensing interface for ATPA and ATP detection.
Keyphrases
- label free
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- single molecule
- gold nanoparticles
- nucleic acid
- stem cells
- real time pcr
- living cells
- air pollution
- high glucose
- quantum dots
- drug induced
- diabetic rats
- heavy metals
- molecularly imprinted
- computed tomography
- endothelial cells
- sensitive detection
- wastewater treatment
- oxidative stress
- pet imaging
- high resolution
- wound healing
- fluorescent probe
- simultaneous determination