Novel Nucleic Acid-Assisted Ion-Responsive ECL Biosensor Based on Hollow AuAg Nanoboxes with Excellent SPR and Effective Coreaction Acceleration.
Jingxian LiHongfen YangRen CaiWeihong TanPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2024)
Novel hollow AuAg nanoboxes (AuAg NBs) were designed for an innovative electrochemiluminescence (ECL) sensor to ultrasensitively detect Pb 2+ and Hg 2+ with the aid of DNAzyme and "thymine-Hg 2+ -thymine" ("T-Hg 2+ -T") structure. AuAg NBs are employed as an excellent surface plasma resonance (SPR) source, as well as an effective coreaction accelerator for the CoNi NFs/S 2 O 8 2- system to greatly improve ECL performance. To detect Pb 2+ , the DNAzyme catalyzes the cleavage of ribonucleic acid targets into numerous small nucleic acid fragments, leading to an ECL signal. When Hg 2+ is added, the thymine-thymine (T-T) mismatches of the Hg 2+ aptamer bind Hg 2+ to form the "T-Hg 2+ -T" structure, which not only inhibits the SPR process but also produces a large steric hindrance, thus quenching the ECL signal and allowing quantification of Hg 2+ . The novel ECL sensor quantifies Pb 2+ in the range of 0.1 fM to 0.1 μM with a limit of detection of 0.07 fM and Hg 2+ in the range of 10 pM to 1 μM with a LOD of 4.07 pM.