Fluorescent Aptasensor and Colorimetric Aptablot for p-tau231 Detection: Toward Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease

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Abstract

The pathology of Alzheimer’s disease (AD), the most common cause of dementia, is considered to be mainly driven by two major hallmarks (tau and amyloid beta). It is highly desirable to develop an affordable medicinal diagnostic that can be utilized worldwide for the early diagnosis of AD. Hence, p-tau231 was selected as a specific target, which appears both in AD serum and cerebrospinal fluid, for the development of a sensing platform for the diagnosis of AD. To the best of our knowledge, these are the first aptamer-mediated biosensors that rely on sensitive fluorescent and colorimetric aptasensors for the rapid monitoring of p-tau231. The nitrogen-doped carbon dot-based turn-on fluorescent aptasensor could rapidly analyze p-tau231 down to 3.64 ng/mL within 40 min, and the colorimetric Cu-enhanced-Au aptablot displayed high sensitivity at 4.71 pg/mL through a digital camera, with visibility to the naked eye down to 8 ng/mL p-tau231 within 140 min. Owing to their advantages, which include affordability, rapidity, high sensitivity, and dependence on complicated instruments, these aptamer-based biosensors offer significant potential for the early diagnosis of AD worldwide.

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Phan, L. M. T., & Cho, S. (2022). Fluorescent Aptasensor and Colorimetric Aptablot for p-tau231 Detection: Toward Early Diagnosis of Alzheimer’s Disease. Biomedicines, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/biomedicines10010093

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