posted on 2022-01-12, 11:43authored byChaoqun Wang, Hongjie Song, Xin Zhao, Rui Liu, Yi Lv
Biomimetic DNA walking machines have
gained great success in scrutinizing
the microscopic world and sensitive biosensing of disease biomarkers.
Despite superb achievements, the research on DNA walking machines
for simultaneous detection of multiple analytes is still rare, while
the design and realization of multiplexing are considered as an important
bottleneck. The multiplex detection of biomarkers can not only improve
the specificity of bioassays but also avoid the squander of valuable
biological specimens. Herein, we reported multiplex three-dimensional
(3D)
DNA walking machines based on high-resolution inductively coupled
plasma mass spectrometry (HR-ICPMS) for lung cancer-associated miRNA
detection. In the presence of lung cancer-associated target miRNAs
(miR-21, miR-141, and miR-125b), DNA walking machines were stimulated
and operated to liberate a large number of lanthanide elements (Tb,
Ho, and Tm), and then the signals were collected simultaneously by
HR-ICPMS. The recovery test of target miRNAs in human serum and the
simultaneous monitoring experiment of three miRNAs in human lung cancer
cell line (A549) and normal cell line (HBE) specimens display satisfactory
analysis capabilities for complex biological samples. Thanks to the
vast potential of lanthanide tags and the modular design, the proposed
bioassay might flexibly detect different miRNA combinations with corresponding
sets of DNA walking machines to meet the requirements of various tasks.