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A gold nanoparticle-based colorimetric mercury(II) biosensor using a DNA probe with phosphorothioate RNA modification and exonuclease III-assisted signal amplification.

Authors :
Xing, Yunpeng
Zhu, Qian
Zhou, Xiaohong
Qi, Peishi
Source :
Microchimica Acta. Apr2020, Vol. 187 Issue 4, p1-8. 8p.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Herein, we report a rapid and sensitive colorimetric detection of Hg2+ by designing a specific DNA probe with phosphorothioate RNA modification (PS-probe) for Hg2+ recognition and utilizing DNA-modified gold nanoparticles (DNA-AuNPs) as the transducer. The distance between two DNA-AuNPs is controlled by a linker DNA, providing the linker DNA-regulated aggregation or dispersion status of AuNPs in solution. Exonuclease III (Exo III) can trigger the recycled digestion of linker DNA strands, inhibiting the reformation of aggregated nanoparticles and hence leading to a color shift from purple to red. However, the Hg2+-induced cleavage of the PS-probe can efficiently prevent the digestion of linker DNA strands by Exo III and hence reassemble the modified AuNPs to form aggregates in purple color. Thus, a positive correlation between the linker DNA strands left and the addition of Hg2+ provides a quantitative basis for Hg2+ sensing. A linear range of A520/A700 versus Hg2+ concentration is achieved in the range 2–100 nM associated with a detection limit as low as 1.30 ± 0.04 nM. Moreover, the biosensor exhibits excellent selectivity for Hg2+. The strong selectivity behavior was confirmed by recoveries ranging from 96 to 114% in real water samples. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00263672
Volume :
187
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Microchimica Acta
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
142763208
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00604-020-4184-0