Abstract

The DNA microarray has distinctive advantages of high-throughput and less complicated operations, but tends to have a relatively low sensitivity. Catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA) is one of the most promising enzyme-free, isothermal DNA circuit for high efficient signal amplification. Here, a microarray-based catalytic hairpin assembly (mi-CHA) biosensing method has been developed to detect various miRNAs in a single test simultaneously. The target miRNA can trigger conformational transformations of hairpin-structured DNA probes on the chip surface and lead to the specific signal amplification. A significant advantage of this approach is that each duplex produced by the solid-phase CHA will be immobilized on the certain location of the chip and release fluorescent signal via the universal domain, eliminating the requirement of different fluorophores. This method has manifested a high detection sensitivity of human cancer-associated miRNAs (miR-21 and miR-155) down to 1.33 fM and promised a high specificity to distinguish single-base mismatches. Furthermore, the practicability of this method was demonstrated by analyzing target miRNAs in human serum and cancer cells. The experimental results suggest that the proposed method has high-throughput analytical potential and could be applied to many other clinical diagnosis.

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