4.7 Article

A sensitive off-on electrochemiluminescence DNA sensor based on signal cascade amplification circuit and distance-dependent energy transfer

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 269, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2023.125464

Keywords

Electrochemiluminescence; Inverted T-shaped DNA junction; Cascade amplification; Resonance energy transfer; Surface plasmon resonance

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A sensitive off-on electrochemiluminescence DNA sensor was developed using Exo III-assisted cascade amplification system. The sensor achieved high selectivity and ultra-high sensitivity in detecting target DNA by utilizing ECL and SPR effects. This study provides a new perspective for designing highly sensitive and programmable ECL biosensors.
A sensitive off-on electrochemiluminescence (ECL) DNA sensor was constructed based on Exo III-assisted cascade amplification system. In the cascade amplification circuit, target DNA and Exo III cutting substrate were designed into an inverted T-shaped binding mode to form a stable DNA junction, thus effectively triggering Exo III digestion cycle. During the biosensor assembly process, ferrocene (Fc) and distance-dependent ECL resonance energy transfer (ECL-RET) and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) effects were introduced to regulate the ECL of semiconductor quantum dots (QDs). Carboxylated ZnCdSe/ZnS QDs were used as ECL signal probes and K2S2O8 was coreactant, and the initial cathodic ECL signal of QDs was efficiently quenched through electron and energy transfer with Fc and ECL-RET with Au NPs, leaving the system in off state. After the products of cascade amplification were introduced into the electrode surface, the single-stranded DNA modified with Fc was displaced, and the distance between Au NPs and QDs became farther, resulting in a transition from ECL-RET to SPR, and then a significant ECL signal boost was achieved, turning the system into on state. The combination of efficient cascade amplification system and sensitive off-on ECL signal change mode enabled the biosensing platform to detect target DNA with high selectivity (able to distinguish single-base mutated DNA) and ultra-high sensitivity (limit of detection was 31.67 aM, S/N = 3), providing a new perspective for designing highly sensitive and programmable ECL biosensors.

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