Publication | Closed Access
Electronic Detection of Target Nucleic Acids by a 2,6-Disulfonic Acid Anthraquinone Intercalator
116
Citations
32
References
2003
Year
EngineeringBioelectrochemistryMolecular BiologyChemistryDna Hybridization BiosensorChemical EngineeringNucleic Acid ChemistryBiosensing SystemsTarget Nucleic AcidsGold SurfaceAnalytical ChemistryNanosensorDna ComputingChemical SensorMolecular ElectrochemistryElectrochemistryAqds ElectrochemistryElectronic DetectionNatural SciencesBioelectronicsNucleic Acid BiochemistryNucleic Acid AmplificationElectroanalytical SensorChemical Probe
A DNA hybridization biosensor based on long-range electron transfer that is capable of detecting DNA single-base mismatch is presented. A mixed self-assembled monolayer of single-stranded DNA (ss-DNA), thiolated at the 3' end, and 6-mercapto-1-hexanol was formed on a gold surface. This probe ss-DNA-modified gold surface was incubated in 2,6-disulfonic acid anthraquinone (AQDS) intercalator solution, rinsed, and placed in an AQDS-free buffer solution, whereupon voltammetric experiments were performed. No voltammetric peaks were observed for probe ss-DNA-modified gold electrodes. Upon DNA hybridization and incubation in AQDS, clear voltammetric peaks, consistent with the oxidation and reduction of AQDS, were observed. The absence of AQDS electrochemistry for ss-DNA-modified surfaces clearly shows the electrochemistry is due to long-range electron transfer through the DNA duplex. No peak currents were observed when the probe ss-DNA-modified surface was exposed to noncomplementary target DNA, but there was a diminution in current signal upon hybridization with C-A mismatched and a G-A mismatched targets.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1