Potential Universal Engineering Component: Tetracycline Response Nanoswitch Based on Triple Helix-Graphene Oxide

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Abstract

The overuse of antibiotics can lead to the emergence of drug resistance, preventing many common diseases from being effectively treated. Therefore, based on the special composite platform of P1/graphene oxide (GO) and DNA triple helix, a programmable DNA nanoswitch for the quantitative detection of tetracycline (TC) was designed. The introduction of GO as a quenching agent can effectively reduce the background fluorescence; stabilizing the trigger strand with a triplex structure minimizes errors. It is worth mentioning that the designed model has been verified and analyzed by both computer simulation and biological experiments. NUPACK predicts the combined mode and yield of each strand, while visual DSD flexibly predicts the changes in components over time during the reaction. The feasibility analysis preliminarily confirmed the realizability of the designed model, and the optimal reaction conditions were obtained through optimization, which laid the foundation for the subsequent quantitative detection of TC, while the selective experiments in different systems fully demonstrated that the model had excellent specificity.

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Wang, L., Wang, Y., Hu, M., Xi, S., Liu, R., Cheng, M., & Dong, Y. (2022). Potential Universal Engineering Component: Tetracycline Response Nanoswitch Based on Triple Helix-Graphene Oxide. Micromachines, 13(12). https://doi.org/10.3390/mi13122119

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