Photocurrent-Polarity-Switching Photoelectrochemical Biosensor for Switching Spatial Distance Electroactive Tags.
Ruijin ZengJianhui XuTikai LiangMei-Jin LiDianping TangPublished in: ACS sensors (2023)
This work presents a photocurrent-polarity-switching-based photoelectrochemical (PEC) biosensing platform for ultrasensitive detection of microRNA-21 (miR-21) through target-triggered catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA) for modulation of methylene blue (MB) and ferrocene (Fc) positional configurations using double-shelled Cu-doped ZnS nanocages (NCs)-Au nanoparticles (NPs) as photoactive materials. In the presence of miR-21, the assembly of MB-labeled HP1 and Fc-labeled HP2 leads to the generation of a large amount of double-stranded DNA (HP1-HP2), which pushes MB away from the electrode surface and brings Fc close to the electrode surface, resulting in effectively quenching the enhanced PEC signal to activate the photocurrent-polarity-switching system. Benefiting from the distance-controllable strategy, the designed PEC bioanalysis can effectively eliminate false-positive and false-negative signals due to the change of different signal expression patterns (from traditional the "signal-on" mode to the photocurrent-polarity-switching mode), thereby significantly improving the sensing specificity and sensitivity. The proposed PEC sensing system exhibited satisfying photocurrent responses toward target miR-21 within the working range from 1.0 fM to 1 nM at a low limit of detection (LOD) of 0.58 fM. More importantly, we demonstrated the successful integration of the proposed PEC biosensor with a handheld wireless device for instant detection of miR-21 concentrations in practical samples.