posted on 2015-12-17, 00:24authored byPo-Jung
Jimmy Huang, Jenny Lin, Jing Cao, Mahsa Vazin, Juewen Liu
Metal-ion detection and speciation
analysis is crucial for environmental
monitoring. Despite the importance of lanthanides, few sensors are
available for their detection. DNAzymes have been previously used
to detect divalent metals, while no analytical work was carried out
for trivalent and tetravalent ions. Herein, in vitro selection was
performed using a Ce4+ salt as the target metal, and a
new DNAzyme (named Ce13) with a bulged hairpin structure was isolated
and characterized. Interestingly, Ce13 has almost no activity with
Ce4+ but is highly active with all trivalent lanthanides
and Y3+, serving as a general probe for rare earth metals
(omitting Sc). A DNAzyme beacon was engineered detecting down to 1.7
nM Ce3+ (240 parts per trillion), and other lanthanides
showed similar sensitivity. The feasibility of metal speciation analysis
was demonstrated by measuring the reduction of Ce4+ to
Ce3+.