posted on 2012-04-25, 00:00authored byYoussef Helwa, Neeshma Dave, Romain Froidevaux, Azadeh Samadi, Juewen Liu
With a low optical background, high loading capacity,
and good
biocompatibility, hydrogels are ideal materials for immobilization
of biopolymers to develop optical biosensors. We recently immobilized
mercury and lead binding DNAs within a monolithic gel and demonstrated
ultrasensitive visual detection of these heavy metals. The high sensitivity
was attributed to the enrichment of the analytes into the gels. The
signaling kinetics was slow, however, taking about 1 h to obtain a
stable optical signal because of a long diffusion distance. In this
work, we aim to understand the analyte enrichment process and improve
the signaling kinetics by preparing hydrogel microparticles. DNA-functionalized
gel beads were synthesized using an emulsion polymerization technique
and most of the beads were between 10 and 50 μm. Acrydite-modified
DNA was incorporated by copolymerization. Visual detection of 10 nM
Hg2+ was still achieved and a stable signal was obtained
in just 2 min. The gel beads could be spotted to form a microarray
and dried for storage. A new visual sensor for adenosine was designed
and immobilized within the gel beads. The adenosine aptamer binds
its target about 1000-fold less tightly compared to the mercury binding
DNA, allowing a comparison to be made on analyte enrichment by aptamer-functionalized
hydrogels.