1 research outputs found
Nanoprobe-Enhanced, Split Aptamer-Based Electrochemical Sandwich Assay for Ultrasensitive Detection of Small Molecules
It
is quite challenging to improve the binding affinity of antismall
molecule aptamers. We report that the binding affinity of anticocaine
split aptamer pairs improved by up to 66-fold by gold nanoparticles
(AuNP)-attached aptamers due to the substantially increased local
concentration of aptamers and multiple and simultaneous ligand interactions.
The significantly improved binding affinity enables the detection
of small molecule targets with unprecedented sensitivity, as demonstrated
in nanoprobe-enhanced split aptamer-based electrochemical sandwich
assays (NE-SAESA). NE-SAESA replaces the traditional molecular reporter
probe with AuNPs conjugated to multiple reporter probes. The increased
binding affinity allowed us to use 1,000-fold lower reporter probe
concentrations relative to those employed in SAESA. We show that the
near-elimination of background in NE-SAESA effectively improves assay
sensitivity by ∼1,000–100,000-fold for ATP and cocaine
detection, relative to equivalent SAESA. With the ongoing development
of new strategies for the selection of aptamers, we anticipate that
our sensor platform should offer a generalizable approach for the
high-sensitivity detection of diverse targets. More importantly, we
believe that NE-SAESA represents a novel strategy to improve the binding
affinity between a small molecule and its aptamer and potentially
can be extended to other detection platforms