4.8 Article

Amplified fluorescent aptasensor through catalytic recycling for highly sensitive detection of ochratoxin A

Journal

BIOSENSORS & BIOELECTRONICS
Volume 65, Issue -, Pages 16-22

Publisher

ELSEVIER ADVANCED TECHNOLOGY
DOI: 10.1016/j.bios.2014.09.100

Keywords

Nano-graphite; DNA aptamer; Amplified detection; Ochratoxin A

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China: Investigation of Fast Pathogen Detection Based on Novel Macroporous Chips Technology [21275105]
  2. National Recruitment Program of Global Experts (NRPGE)
  3. Hundred Talents Program of Sichuan Province (HTPSP)
  4. Startup Funding of Sichuan University

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This paper describes a novel approach utilizing nano-graphite aptamer hybrid and DNase I for the amplified detection of ochratoxin A (OTA) for the first time. Nano-graphite can effectively quench the fluorescence of carboxyfluorescein (FAM) labeled OTA specific aptamer due to their strong pi-pi; stacking interactions; while upon OTA addition, it will bind with aptamer to fold into an OTA-aptamerG-quadruplex structure, which does not adsorb on the surface of nano-graphite and thus retains the dye fluorescence. Meanwhile, the G-quadruplex structure can be cleaved by DNase I, and in such case OTA is delivered from the complex. The released OTA then binds other FAM-labeled aptamers on the nanographite surface, and touches off another target recycling, resulting in the successive release of dye-labeled aptamers from the nano-graphite, which leads to significant amplification of the signal. Under the optimized conditions, the present amplified sensing system exhibits high sensitivity toward OTA with a limit of detection of 20 nM (practical measurement), which is about 100-fold higher than that of traditional unamplified homogeneous assay. Our developed method also showed high selectivity against other interference molecules and can be applied for the detection of OTA in real red wine samples. The proposed assay is simple, cost-effective, and might open a door for the development of new assays for other biomolecules. This aptasensor is of great practical importance in food safety and could be widely extended to the detection of other toxins by replacing the sequence of the recognition aptamer. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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