posted on 2017-08-04, 00:00authored byHaiyin Li, Chuanfeng Wang, Ting Hou, Feng Li
The development of
ultrasensitive and highly selective fluorescence
biosensors for diverse analytes is highly desirable but remains a
challenge. It is attributable to the scarcity of fluorogens with promising
brightness, stability, and nontoxicity, which primarily determine
the performance of fluorescence biosensors. Herein, we report the
design and preparation of aggregation induced emission (AIE) dots
with high brightness, exceptional colloidal stability, ultrasmall
size, and functional groups for developing ultrasensitive biosensor
through the electrostatic conjugation to biological molecules, and
use blemycin (BLM) as the proof-of-concept analyte. The recognition
and the subsequent cleavage of the quencher-labeled DNA (Q-DNA) by
BLM result in the formation of three-mer quencher-linked oligonucleotide
fragments (Q-DNA-1), which significantly decreases the amount of quenchers
anchored on AIE dot surfaces and subsequently reduces the fluorescence
resonance energy transfer (FRET) effect. As compared to the case in
which BLM is absent, remarkable fluorescence enhancement is observed,
and is dependent on BLM concentration. Thus, ultrasensitive fluorescence
detection of target BLM is realized, with a detection limit down to
3.4 fM, the lowest value reported so far. Moreover, the proposed fluorescence
biosensor has also been successfully utilized for detection of BLM
spiked in human serum samples. The as-proposed strategy not only significantly
improves the selectivity and sensitivity of BLM assay, but also allows
the ultrasensitive detection of a variety of bioactive molecules by
simply changing the specific target recognition substances, thus providing
a versatile fluorescence platform, and showing great potential to
be applied in chemo-/bioanalysis and clinical biomedicine.