| Literature DB >> 33987852 |
Dekai Ye1, Juan Wang1,2, Hongguang Shen1,2, Xinping Feng2, Lanyi Xiang1,2, Wenlong Jin1,2, Wenrui Zhao1,2, Jiamin Ding1,2, Zihan He1,2, Ye Zou1, Qing Meng1, Wei Cui2, Fengjiao Zhang2, Chong-An Di1, Chunhai Fan3, Daoben Zhu1.
Abstract
Organic transistor with DNA-damage evaluation ability can open up novel opportunities for bioelectronic devices. Even though trace amounts of drugs can cause cumulative gene damage in vivo, the extremely low occurrence proportion makes them hardly transduced into detectable electric signals. Here, an ultrasensitive DNA-damage sensor based on an oligonucleotide-distortion-responsive organic transistor (DROT) is reported by creating controllable conformation change of double-stranded DNA on the surface of organic semiconductors. In combination with interfacial charge redistribution and efficient signal amplification, the DROT provides an ultrasensitive single-site DNA-damage response with 20.5 s even upon 1 × 10-12 m cisplatin. The high generalizability of this DROT to three generations of classical platinum drugs and gene-relevant DNA damage is demonstrated. A biochip is further designed for intelligent damage analysis in complex environments, which holds the potential for high-throughput biotoxicity evaluation and drug screening in the future.Entities:
Keywords: DNA distortion; bioelectronic devices; biosensors; organic semiconductors; organic transistors
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33987852 DOI: 10.1002/adma.202100489
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849