| Literature DB >> 35265201 |
Yan Zheng1, Limin Zhang1, Jinge Zhao1, Lingyun Li1, Minxuan Wang1, Peifeng Gao2, Qing Wang3, Xiaoling Zhang1, Weizhi Wang1.
Abstract
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is an irreversible neurodegenerative disease, causing profound social and economic implications. Early diagnosis and treatment of AD have faced great challenges due to the slow and hidden onset. β-amyloid (Aβ) protein has been considered an important biomarker and therapeutic target for AD. Therefore, non-invasive, simple, rapid and real-time detection methods for AD biomarkers are particularly favored. With the development of Aβ aptamers, the specific recognition between aptamers and Aβ plays a significant role in AD theranostics. On the one hand, aptamers are applied to construct biosensors for Aβ detection, which provides possibilities for early diagnosis of AD. On the other hand, aptamers are used for regulating Aβ aggregation process, which provides potential strategies for AD treatment. Many excellent reviews have summarized aptamers for neurodegenerative diseases or biosensors using specific recognition probes for Aβ detection applications in AD. In this review, we highlight the crucial role of the design, classification and applications of aptamers on Aβ detection as well as inhibition of Aβ aggregation for AD. © The author(s).Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Aptamer; Inhibition; Sensing and detection; β-amyloid aggregation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35265201 PMCID: PMC8899576 DOI: 10.7150/thno.69465
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Theranostics ISSN: 1838-7640 Impact factor: 11.556
The reported aptamers against Aβ
| Name | Classification | Target | Binding Affinity ( | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| β55 | RNA | Aβ40 fibril | 29 nM |
|
| N2, E2 | RNA | Aβ40 monomer | 21.6 µM; 10.9 µM |
|
| KM33, KM41 | RNA | Aβ40 fibril | - |
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| E22P-AbD43 | RNA | Aβ42 dimer | 20 ± 6.0 nM |
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| T-SO508 | DNA | Aβ40 oligomer | 25 nM |
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| RNV95 | DNA | Aβ40 oligomer | 50-400 nM |
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| Aβ-79-1H1 | DNA | Aβ42 monomer | 63.4 nM |
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| c-abp2, n-abp4 | Peptide | Aβ42 oligomer | 35.80 ± 18.22 pM; 217.97 ± 27.01 pM |
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The reported biosensors based on aptamers for Aβ detection
| Detection mechanism | Biomarkers/Functions | Samples tested | Detection range | LOD | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Electrochemical aptasensor | Aβ40/42 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 1 nM-2 µM | 450 pM |
|
| Electrochemical aptasensor | Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF, serum | 0.1 nM-1 μM | 93 pM |
|
| Antibody-aptamer sandwich method | Aβ40/42 oligomers/ | Artificial CSF | 0.5-30 nM | 100 pM |
|
| Molecularly imprinted polymers-aptamer sandwich method | Aβ42 oligomers | Serum | 5 pg/mL-10 ng/mL | 1.22 pg/mL |
|
| Electrochemical aptasensor based on dual amplification | Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF, serum | 0.1 pM to 10 nM | 39 fM |
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| ECL aptasensor enhanced by AuNP/MOF nanocomposite | Aβ42 oligomers | Serum | 0.1 pM-10 pM | 71 fM |
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| Switchable electrochemical aptasensor based on triple helix switch | Aβ42 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 0.5 fM-500 fM | 0.25 fM |
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| Signal-on ECL aptasensor based on ROS generation | Aβ16 monomers | Serum | 0.1 pM to 10 nM | 35 fM |
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| ECL biosensor based on | Aβ40 monomers | Serum | 10 fM-0.1 μM | 3.25 fM |
|
| Hairpin-based DNA aptamer sensor | Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 0.1-10 pM | 2 fM |
|
| Magnetic aptasensor based on ECL-RET | Aβ40 oligomers | Real CSF | 10 fg/mL-100 ng/mL | 4.2 fg/mL |
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| Ratiometric ECL-RET aptasensor based on g-C3N4 and Ru@MOFs | Aβ40 oligomers | Serum | 10 fg/mL-500 ng/mL | 3.9 fg/mL |
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| Dual-aptamer functionalized 3D nanostructure with a multi-electrode array chip | ATP and Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 1 pM-0.2 μM (Aβ); 0.01 nM-1 μM (ATP) | 2 pM for ATP; |
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| Micron-scale organic electrochemical transistor | Aβ aggregates | Serum | 2.21 fM-221 nM | 2.21 fM |
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| Fluorescence sensor based on aptamers-functionalized Fe3O4 and UCNPs | Aβ40/42 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 0.2-15 nM | 36 pM |
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| Signal on fluorescence sensor based on bifunctional polydopamine nanospheres | Aβ40 oligomers/ | - | 20 nM-10 μM | 12.5 nM |
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| Off-to-on fluorescence sensor based on MoS2 NSs and dye-labeled DNA aptamers | Aβ42 oligomers/ inhibiting aggregation, degrading fibrils | Hippocampus, cortex of transgenic AD mice | 0.01-20 μM | 3.1 nM |
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| DNase-driven three-dimensional DNA Walker nanoprobe | Aβ40 oligomers | Living cells, AD mice | 0.1-1.0 nM | 22.3 pM |
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| Fluorescence sensor based on “DD-A” FRET and CHA amplifier | Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF, serum | 1 pM-100 | 0.69 pM |
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| Fluorescence imaging based on aptamer probe β55 | Aβ plaques | AD brain tissue, AD mice | - | - |
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| Aptasensor based on IRS and nanoporous anodic aluminum oxide | Aβ42 oligomers | - | 0.5-50 μg/mL | 0.02 μg/mL |
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| Colorimetric sensor based on AuNPs aggregation | Aβ40 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 1-600 nM | 0.56 nM |
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| Light-up colorimetric sensor based on non-thiolated aptamers | Aβ40 oligomers | Real CSF | 35-700 nM | 10 nM |
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| New ELISA based on aptamer-antibody sandwich | Aβ40/42 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 0.02-25 nM | 50 pM |
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| Dual aptamers-based SPR sensor | Aβ40 oligomers/ | Artificial CSF, real CSF | 0-10 pM | 0.2 pM for oligomer; |
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| SERS sensor based on different Raman dye-encoded polyA aptamer-AuNPs | Tau proteins and Aβ42 oligomers | Artificial CSF | 1 fM-3 nM (Tau); | 0.42 fM for Tau; |
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| TIRFM-EMCCD imaging system based on antibody-aptamer sandwich | Aβ42 monomer, Tau441 and p-tau181 | Real CSF and serum | 0-1 pM | 8.4 fM for Aβ42; |
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