4.6 Article

Enhancing the sensing specificity of a MoS2 nanosheet-based FRET aptasensor using a surface blocking strategy

Journal

ANALYST
Volume 142, Issue 14, Pages 2570-2577

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7an00640c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NUS Graduate School
  2. National Research Foundation
  3. Prime Minister's Office, Singapore under its medium-sized centre programme, Centre for Advanced 2D Materials
  4. Prime Minister's Office, Singapore under its Research Centre of Excellence, Mechanobiology Institute
  5. MechanoBioEngineering Laboratory of the Department of Biomedical Engineering of the National University of Singapore
  6. MOE under AcRF Tier 2 [ARC 26/13, MOE2013-T2-1-034, ARC 19/15, MOE2014-T2-2-093, MOE2015-T2-2-057]
  7. MOE under AcRF Tier 1 [RG5/13]
  8. NTU under Start-Up Grant [M4081296.070.500000]
  9. iFood Research Grant [M4081458.070.500000]
  10. Singapore Millennium Foundation

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Aptamer-based biosensing, which uses short, single-stranded nucleic acid segments to bind to a target, can be advantageous over antibody-based diagnostics due to the ease of synthesis and high stability of aptamers. However, the development of most aptamer-based sensors (aptasensors) is still in its initial stages and many factors affecting their performance have not been studied in great detail. Here, we enhance the sensing specificity of a fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET)-based MoS2 nanosheet aptasensor in detecting the malarial biomarker Plasmodium lactate dehydrogenase (pLDH). In this sensing scheme, the presence of target is signaled by an increase in fluorescence when fluores-cently-labeled aptamers bind to pLDH and release from a quenching material. Interestingly, unlike most of the reported literature on aptasensors, we observe that non-target proteins also cause a considerable increase in the detected fluorescence. This may be due to the nonspecific adsorption of proteins onto the fluorescence quencher, leading to the displacement of aptamers from the quencher surface. To reduce this nonspecific association and to enhance the sensor specificity, we propose the application of a surface blocking agent to the quenching material. Importantly, we demonstrate that the sensing specificity of the MoS2 nanosheet-based aptasensor towards target pLDH biomolecules can be significantly enhanced through surface passivation, thus contributing to the development of highly selective and robust point-of-care malaria diagnostics.

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