Analyte-Driven Switching
of DNA Charge Transport: <i>De Novo</i> Creation of Electronic
Sensors for an Early Lung
Cancer Biomarker
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Abstract
A general approach is described for the <i>de novo</i> design and construction of aptamer-based electrochemical biosensors,
for potentially any analyte of interest (ranging from small ligands
to biological macromolecules). As a demonstration of the approach,
we report the rapid development of a made-to-order electronic sensor
for a newly reported early biomarker for lung cancer (CTAP III/NAP2).
The steps include the <i>in vitro</i> selection and characterization
of DNA aptamer sequences, design and biochemical testing of wholly
DNA sensor constructs, and translation to a functional electrode-bound
sensor format. The working principle of this distinct class of electronic
biosensors is the enhancement of DNA-mediated charge transport in
response to analyte binding. We first verify such analyte-responsive
charge transport switching in solution, using biochemical methods;
successful sensor variants were then immobilized on gold electrodes.
We show that using these sensor-modified electrodes, CTAP III/NAP2
can be detected with both high specificity and sensitivity (<i>K</i><sub>d</sub> ∼1 nM) through a direct electrochemical
reading. To investigate the underlying basis of analyte binding-induced
conductivity switching, we carried out Förster Resonance Energy
Transfer (FRET) experiments. The FRET data establish that analyte
binding-induced conductivity switching in these sensors results from
very subtle structural/conformational changes, rather than large scale,
global folding events. The implications of this finding are discussed
with respect to possible charge transport switching mechanisms in
electrode-bound sensors. Overall, the approach we describe here represents
a unique design principle for aptamer-based electrochemical sensors;
its application should enable rapid, on-demand access to a class of
portable biosensors that offer robust, inexpensive, and operationally
simplified alternatives to conventional antibody-based immunoassays