Ultrasensitive optical biosensor for detection of miRNA-155 using positively charged Au nanoparticles

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Abstract

An ultrasensitive optical biosensor for microRNA-155 (miR-155) was developed to diagnose breast cancer at early stages. At first, the probe DNA covalently bind to the negatively charged gold nanoparticles (citrate-capped AuNPs). Then, the target miR-155 electrostatically adsorb onto the positively charged gold nanoparticles (polyethylenimine-capped AuNP) surface. Finally, by mixing citrate-capped AuNP/probe and polyethylenimine-capped AuNP/miR-155, hybridization occurs and the optical signal of the mixture give a measure to quantify the miR-155 content. The proposed biosensor is able to specify 3-base-pair mismatches and genomic DNA from target miR-155. The novelty of this biosensor is in its ability to trap the label-free target by its branched positively charged polyethylenimine. This method increases loading the target on the polyethylenimine-capped AuNPs' surface. So, proposed sensor enables miR-155 detection at very low concentrations with the detection limit of 100 aM and a wide linear range from 100 aM to 100 fM.

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Hakimian, F., Ghourchian, H., Hashemi, A. S., Arastoo, M. R., & Behnam Rad, M. (2018). Ultrasensitive optical biosensor for detection of miRNA-155 using positively charged Au nanoparticles. Scientific Reports, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-018-20229-z

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