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Development of a Colorimetric and SERS Dual-Signal Platform via dCas9-Mediated Chain Assembly of Bifunctional Au@Pt Nanozymes for Ultrasensitive and Robust Salmonella Assay.

Han JiangWei ChangXiaofan ZhuGang LiuKaiyong LiuWei ChenHua WangPanzhu Qin
Published in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Timely screening for harmful pathogens is a great challenge in emergencies where traditional culture methods suffer from long assay time and alternative methods are limited by poor accuracy and low robustness. Herein, we present a dCas9-mediated colorimetric and surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) dual-signal platform (dCas9-CSD) to address this challenge. Strategically, the platform used dCas9 to accurately recognize the repetitive sequences in amplicons produced by loop-mediated isothermal amplification (LAMP), forming nucleic acid frameworks that assemble numerous bifunctional gold-platinum (Au@Pt) nanozymes into chains on the surface of streptavidin-magnetic beads (SA-MB). The collected Au@Pt converted colorless 3,3',5,5'-tetramethylbenzidine (TMB) to blue oxidized TMB (oxTMB) via its Pt shell and then enhanced the Raman signal of oxTMB by its Au core. Therefore, the presence of Salmonella could be dexterously converted into cross-validated colorimetric and SERS signals, providing more reliable conclusions. Notably, dCas9-mediated secondary recognition of amplicons reduced background signal caused by nontarget amplification, and two-round signal amplification consisting of LAMP reaction and Au@Pt catalysis greatly improved the sensitivity. With this design, Salmonella as low as 1 CFU/mL could be detected within 50 min by colorimetric and SERS modes. The robustness of dCas9-CSD was further confirmed by various real samples such as lake water, cabbage, milk, orange juice, beer, and eggs. This work provides a promising point-of-need tool for pathogen detection.
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