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Download fileDetection of Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms Using an ON–OFF Switching of Regenerated Biosensor Based on a Locked Nucleic Acid-Integrated and Toehold-Mediated Strand Displacement Reaction
journal contribution
posted on 2014-03-04, 00:00 authored by Zhong
Feng Gao, Yu Ling, Lu Lu, Ning Yu Chen, Hong Qun Luo, Nian Bing LiAlthough
various strategies have been reported for single-nucleotide
polymorphisms (SNPs) detection, development of a time-saving, specific,
and regenerated electrochemical sensing platform still remains a realistic
goal. In this study, an ON–OFF switching of a regenerated biosensor
based on a locked nucleic acid (LNA)-integrated and toehold-mediated
strand displacement reaction technique is constructed for detection
of SNPs. The LNA-integrated and methylene blue-labeled capture probe
with an external toehold is designed to switch on the sensing system.
The mutant-type DNA probe completes complementary with the capture
probe to trigger the strand displacement reaction, which switches
off the sensing system. However, when the single-base mismatched wild-type
DNA probe is presented, the strand displacement reaction cannot be
achieved; therefore, the sensing system still keeps the ON state.
This DNA sensor is stable over five reuses. We further testify that
the LNA-integrated sequence has better recognition ability for SNPs
detection compared to the DNA-integrated sequence. Moreover, this
DNA senor exhibits a remarkable discrimination capability of SNPs
among abundant wild-type targets and 6000-fold (m/m) excess of genomic DNA. In addition, it is selective enough in complex
and contaminant-ridden samples, such as human urine, soil, saliva,
and beer. Overall, these results demonstrate that this reliable DNA
sensor is easy to be fabricated, simple to operate, and stable enough
to be readily regenerated.