Click DNA cycling in combination with gold nanoparticles loaded with quadruplex DNA motifs enable sensitive electrochemical quantitation of the tuberculosis-associated biomarker CFP-10 in sputum

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Abstract

An electrochemical aptamer-based assay is described for the determination of CFP-10 which is an early secretary biomarker of Mycobacterium tuberculosis. CFP-10 is specifically captured by its aptamer and then induces a DNA cross-linking click reaction, the release of CFP-10, and an amplification cycle of repeated CFP-10 release. This mechanism (with dual amplification via DNA click and target release cycle) causes more and more CFP-10 Apt strands on the electrode surface to expose their 5′ overhang and to hybridize with the DNA complexes linked to the gold nanoparticles (AuNPs). Consequently, large amounts of AuNPs, each loaded with a number of quadruplex DNA motifs, can be bound on the electrode surface and remarkably enhance the signal. Under optimal conditions, the method has a detection limit as low as 10 pg.mL−1 of CFP-10. The method was successfully applied to the diagnosis of M. tuberculosis in sputum. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Li, J., Hu, K., Zhang, Z., Teng, X., & Zhang, X. (2019). Click DNA cycling in combination with gold nanoparticles loaded with quadruplex DNA motifs enable sensitive electrochemical quantitation of the tuberculosis-associated biomarker CFP-10 in sputum. Microchimica Acta, 186(9). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00604-019-3780-3

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