Accurate, rapid, and sensitive pathogenic detections
play an important
role in food safety. Herein, we developed a novel CRISPR/Cas12a mediated strand displacement/hybridization chain reaction (CSDHCR) nucleic acid assay
for foodborne pathogenic colorimetric detection. A biotinylated DNA
toehold is coupled on avidin magnetic beads and acts as an initiator
strand to trigger the SDHCR. The SDHCR amplification allowed the formation
of long hemin/G-quadruplex-based DNAzyme products to catalyze the
TMB-H2O2 reaction. In the presence of the DNA
targets, the trans-cleavage activity of CRISPR/Cas12a was activated
to cleave the initiator DNA, resulting in the failure of SDHCR and
no color change. Under optimal conditions, the CSDHCR has a satisfactory
linear detection of DNA targets with a regression equation Y = 0.0531*X โ 0.0091 (R2 = 0.9903) in the range of 10 fM to 1 nM, and the limit
of detection was determined as 4.54 fM. In addition, Vibrio
vulnificus, one foodborne pathogen, was used to verify the
practical application of the method, and it showed satisfactory specificity
and sensitivity with a limit of detection at 1.0 ร 100 CFU/mL coupling with recombinase polymerase amplification. Our proposed
CSDHCR biosensor could be a promising alternative method for ultrasensitive
and visual detection of nucleic acids and the practical application
of foodborne pathogens