textjournal article
Electrochemical Interrogation of Kinetically-Controlled Dendritic DNA/PNA Assembly for Immobilization-Free and Enzyme-Free Nucleic Acids Sensing
Abstract
We present an immobilization-free and enzyme-free electrochemical nucleic acid sensing strategy, which uses kinetically controlled dendritic assembly of DNA and peptide nucleic acid (PNA). In the presence of a target sequence, ferrocene-labeled PNA probes (Fc-PNAs) and specially designed DNA strands are autonomously assembled into dendritic nanostructures through a cascade of toehold-mediated strand displacement reactions. The consumption of freely diffusible Fc-PNAs (neutrally charged), due to incorporation to DNA/PNA dendrimer, results in a significant electrochemical signal reduction of Fc on a negatively charged electrode from which the hyperbranched and negatively charged dendrimer of DNA/PNA would be electrostatically repelled. The cascade-like assembly process and large electrostatic affinity difference between Fc-PNAs and DNA/PNA dendrimer toward the sensing electrode offer a detection limit down to 100 fM and an inherently high specificity for detecting single nucleotide polymorphisms. The target-triggered mechanism was examined by PAGE analysis, and morphologies of the assembled dendrimers were verified by AFM imaging- Text
- Journal contribution
- Biophysics
- Biochemistry
- Microbiology
- Cell Biology
- Genetics
- Molecular Biology
- Immunology
- Virology
- Chemical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- Physical Sciences not elsewhere classified
- detection limit
- electrochemical signal reduction
- affinity difference
- Electrochemical Interrogation
- AFM imaging
- DNA strands
- dendrimer
- 100 fM
- target sequence
- electrode offer
- nucleotide polymorphisms
- dendritic assembly
- PAGE analysis
- PNA
- dendritic nanostructures