| Literature DB >> 35316405 |
Tai Ye1, Dongdong Zhu1, Liling Hao1, Min Yuan1, Hui Cao1, Xiuxiu Wu1, Fengqin Yin1, Fei Xu2.
Abstract
Kanamycin fluorescence aptasensors were created using a series of di-block oligonucleotide modified gold nanoparticles with various lengths of poly-adenine. In the presence of kanamycin, the double strand structure of the aptamer-reporter strand complex is disrupted, and the dye-labelled reporter strand detaches from the surface of gold nanoparticles, resulting in fluorescence recovery (Ex/Em = 485/520 nm). By adjusting the number of consecutive adenines, the programable aptamer density can be implemented on the gold nanoparticle surface, and the conformation of nucleic acid changed from lying-down to up-right. The apparent binding constant, binding kinetics, and limit of detection of the prepared aptasensors were carefully examined to explore the influence of surface density. Under the optimum condition, the aptasensor had a tenfold lower limit of detection than the thiolated aptamer modified one, as low as 23.6 nM, when a di-block oligonucleotide with twenty consecutive adenines tailed. In addition, satisfactory recoveries ranging from 96.33 to 99.47% were achieved in spiked milk samples with relative standard deviation of 1.2-6.9% (n = 3). This surface density regulation strategy holds great promise in other aptamer-based interfacial recognition and sensing. Schematic presentation of di-block oligonucleotide modified gold nanoparticle with different surface densities and its kanamycin sensing application.Entities:
Keywords: Aptasensor; Au nanoparticle; Binding affinity; Fluorescence; Surface density; Surface engineering
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35316405 DOI: 10.1007/s00604-022-05235-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mikrochim Acta ISSN: 0026-3672 Impact factor: 5.833