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Application of Antibody-Powered Triplex-DNA Nanomachine to Electrochemiluminescence Biosensor for the Detection of Anti-Digoxigenin with Improved Sensitivity Versus Cycling Strand Displacement Reaction.

Shan-Shan YangMing-Hui JiangYa-Qin ChaiRuo YuanYing Zhuo
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2018)
The accurate and rapid quantitative detection of antibodies had a significant influence in controlling and preventing disease or toxin outbreaks. In this work, we first introduce the antibody-powered triplex-DNA nanomachine to release cargo DNA as a substitute target for sensitive electrochemiluminescence (ECL) detection of anti-digoxigenin based on a novel ternary ECL system. It is worth noting that the cargo DNA as a substitute target of antibody can further participate in an enzyme-assisted cycling strand displacement reaction to achieve ECL signal amplification and improve the sensitivity of antibody detection. Additionally, porous palladium nanospheres with a considerable catalytic activity were first applied as a coreaction accelerator to efficiently enhance the intensity of the ECL system of rubrene microblocks as luminophore and dissolved O2 as an endogenous coreactant. With the resultant ternary ECL system as a biosensing platform, a significantly enhanced initial signal was achieved in advance. Then, the ferrocene-labeled quenching probes were employed to reduce initial signal and obtain the low-background signal. Eventually, the cargo DNA made the quenching probes release and recover the signal in the presence of anti-digoxigenin. Thereupon, the wide linear range (0.01-200 nM) and low limit of detection (6.7 pM) were obtained, and this method not only reduces conjugation steps but also provides a sensitive and novel ECL analysis platform for the trace detection of other antibodies and antigen.
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