| Literature DB >> 30707306 |
Jiaxing Wang1, Linlin Zhang1, Liping Lu2, Tianfang Kang1.
Abstract
An electrochemiluminescence (ECL) based biosensor is described for determination of microRNAs in the A549 cell line. Firstly, graphene oxide (GO) is dripped onto a glassy carbon electrode surface to form an interface to which one end of the capture probe (with a stem-loop structure) can be anchored through π-interaction via dangling unpaired bases. The other end of the capture probe is directed away from the GO surface to make it stand upright. Target microRNAs can open the hairpin structure to form a double-stranded DNA-RNA structure. Two auxiliary probes, generating a hybridization chain reaction, are used to elongate the DNA duplex. Finally, doxorubicin-modified cadmium telluride quantum dot nanoparticles (Dox-CdTe QD) are intercalated into the base pairs of the hybrid duplexes to act as signalling molecules. The ECL signal of the Dox-CdTe QD increases proportionally with the concentration of microRNAs, specifically for microRNA-21. The assay covers a wide linear range (1 fM to 0.1 nM), has a low detection limit for microRNA-21 (1 fM), and is selective, reproducible, and stable. Graphical abstract An enzyme-free amplification electrochemiluminescent assay is described to quantitative detection of microRNA in the A549 cell line. Graphene oxide was used to immobilize capture probes obviating the special modification. Doxorubicin-modified cadmium telluride quantum dot nanoparticles are intercalated into the base pairs of the hybrid duplexes to act as signalling molecules.Entities:
Keywords: CdTe; DNA probe; Doxorubicin; Hybridization chain reaction; π-stacking interaction
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Year: 2019 PMID: 30707306 DOI: 10.1007/s00604-019-3252-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mikrochim Acta ISSN: 0026-3672 Impact factor: 5.833