posted on 2025-03-06, 09:43authored byPing Nie, Ke Chen, Chengxin Tian, Ensheng Xu, Qingwang Xue, Jibin Song, Pin Wang
The
development of DNA rolling machines with high rolling efficiency
for ratiometric biosensing is of great significance for the accurate
diagnosis and evaluation of diseases. Herein, an interparticle DNA
rolling machine constructed by well-oriented and ordered DNA nanorollers
guided by tetrahedral DNA was exploited for high-efficiency lung tumor-related
human neutrophil elastase (HNE) SERS ratiometric sensing. In this
design, tetrahedral DNA with blocked DNAzyme was assembled on AuNPs
to engineer well-oriented and ordered walking DNA nanorollers (WDNs)
endowed with high collision efficiency and accessibility, significantly
improving the reaction kinetics and rolling efficiency. When the DNAzyme
“leg DNA” on WDNs were activated through the multivalent
DNA converted by target HNE, the activated WDNs with polyoriented
walkers rolled efficiently along directional hairpin “track
DNA” on magnetic NPs (H1@MNPs) that served as continuously
“cleaving-rolling-assembly” specific substrates (CRAS),
constructing an interparticle rolling machine and finally converting
HNE into a ratiometric SERS signal in a nanogap-rich silver nanoisland
substrate. The CRAS increased the reaction direction and local concentration,
improving the accessibility and signal. The interparticle relative
motion with nonplanar polyoriented walking arms weakens the derailment
of rolling “leg DNA”, improves the processivity, and
amplifies capability. Moreover, nanogap-rich silver nanoisland SERS
substrates promote the formation of high-density hot spot domains,
further improving the detection sensitivity. Of note, the rolling
machine ratiometric biosensor successfully measures the HNE with a
detection limit of 0.25 pM and can screen inhibitors and discriminate
the HNE levels in serum and tissue of normal and lung tumor patients,
suggesting that the biosensor provides an effective tool for early
diagnosis, prognostic evaluation, and drug discovery of lung tumor.