| Literature DB >> 27600212 |
Feriel Melaine1,2,3, Yoann Roupioz4,5,6, Arnaud Buhot7,8,9.
Abstract
The detection of small molecules by biosensors remains a challenge for diagnostics in many areas like pharmacology, environment or homeland security. The main difficulty comes from both the low molecular weight and low concentrations of most targets, which generally requires an indirect detection with an amplification or a sandwich procedure. In this study, we combine both strategies as the amplification of Surface Plasmon Resonance imaging (SPRi) signal is obtained by the use of gold nanoparticles and the sequence engineering of split-aptamers, short oligonucleotides strands with strong affinity towards small targets, allows for a sandwich structure. Combining those two strategies, we obtained state-of-the-art results in the limit of detection (LOD = 50 nM) with the model target adenosine. Furthermore, the SPRi detection led on aptamer microarrays paves the way for potential multi-target detections thanks to the multi-probe imaging approach.Entities:
Keywords: Surface Plasmon Resonance imaging; gold nanoparticles; small molecules detection; split-aptamers
Year: 2015 PMID: 27600212 PMCID: PMC4996384 DOI: 10.3390/microarrays4010041
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Microarrays (Basel) ISSN: 2076-3905
Oligonucleotide sequences.
| Name | Sequence (5' > 3') |
|---|---|
| APT8 | HS-T5-AGAGAACCTGGGGGAGTATTGCGGAGGAAGGTTCTC |
| APT4 | HS-T5-AGAGAACCTGGGGGAGTATTGCGGAGGAAGGTAGAG |
| Split-APT8 | HS-T10-TGCGGAGGAAGGTTCTC |
| Split-APT4 | HS-T10-TGCGGAGGAAGGTAGAG |
| Split-APT | HS-T10-AGAGAACCTGGGGGAGTAT |
| CN8 | H2N-T5-TAAGTTCATCTCCCCGGTGGTGGTTGTGGTT |
Figure 1Reflectivity shifts observed upon injection of gold nanoparticles grafted with Split-APT sequences on various spots of the Surface Plasmon Resonance imaging (SPRi) biosensor surface without the target adenosine present in the solution. Signal increase is observed only on Split-APT8 spots through hybridization of the hairpin stems of the split‑aptamers. APT8 and APT4 spots do not present signal shift due to a folding of the complete aptamer on the surface while Split-APT4 sequences present stems (four bases) too short to hybridize with the Split-APT sequences grafted on the gold nanoparticles. Lack of non-specific signal is also confirmed on control spots with sequences CN8 and Split-APT or on pure gold.
Figure 2Aptamer sequence engineering into split-aptamers. Split-APT corresponds to the common part of both APT4 and APT8 split sequences whereas Split-APT4 and Split-APT8 are their respective counterparts.
Figure 3Split-APT gold nanoparticles interacting modes with the aptamer microarray: (A) Split-APT gold nanoparticles do not interact with APT8 spots due to the folding of the complete aptamer; (B) Split-APT gold nanoparticles interacts with Split-APT8 spots through hybridization even without adenosine; (C) Split-APT gold nanoparticles do not interact with Split-APT4 spots without adenosine, but (D) interacts with Split-APT4 spots in presence of adenosine.
Figure 4A series of different adenosine (A) concentrations have been incubated in presence of Split-APT coated gold nanoparticles. Higher SPRi signals on Split-APT8 spots are observed upon increased concentrations allowing a detection limit of 50 μM. The injection of 100 μM of guanosine (G) does not significantly modify the SPRi signal compared to the injection of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) alone implying a good selectivity of the biosensor.
Figure 5A range of adenosine (A) concentrations have been incubated in presence of Split-APT coated gold nanoparticles. Higher SPRi signals on Split-APT4 spots are observed upon increased concentrations allowing a detection limit of 50 nM. The injection of 1 μM of guanosine (G) does not significantly modify the SPRi signal compared to the injection of gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) alone implying a good selectivity of the biosensor.