Publication | Closed Access
A Target-Responsive Electrochemical Aptamer Switch (TREAS) for Reagentless Detection of Nanomolar ATP
587
Citations
11
References
2007
Year
EngineeringBioelectrochemistryMolecular BiologyNanomolar AtpBiosensing SystemsMolecular CommunicationNanosensorCation SensingElectrode SurfaceThiolated DuplexBiochemistrySolution Nmr SpectroscopyBiomolecular ScienceBiomolecular EngineeringReagentless DetectionBiomedical DiagnosticsNatural SciencesBioelectronicsElectroanalytical SensorChemical ProbeSmall MoleculesTarget Atp
In this communication, we report a highly generalizable strategy, target-responsive electrochemical aptamer switch (TREAS) for the development of aptamer-based biosensors. In a typical TREAS design for ATP detection, the aptamer oligonucleotide dually labeled with thiol and ferrocene groups is hybridized with its complementary strand, and the thiolated duplex is self-assembled on a gold electrode. This duplex is responsive to the target ATP, which liberates the complementary strand and forms the aptamer−target complex. The electroactive ferrocene moiety, which is distal to the electrode surface in the absence of ATP, is moved to the proximal position during the binding-induced structural transition. This binding turns on the electron transfer and leads to measurable electrochemical signals for quantification of ATP. We then demonstrate that TREAS is a signal-on, reagentless sensor that can selectively detect ATP and features both generalizability and simplicity in design.
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