Abstract

Rational utilization of the rich light-bio-matter interplay taking place in single-cell analysis represents a new technological direction in the field. The light-fueled operation is expected to achieve advanced photoelectrochemical (PEC) single-cell analysis with unknown possibilities. Here, a PEC nanoreactor capable of single-cell sampling and near zero-background Faradaic detection of intracellular microRNA (miR) is devised by the construction of a small reaction chamber accommodating the target-triggered hybridization chain reaction for binding the metallointercalator of [Ru(bpy)2 (dppz)]2+ as the signal reporter. Light stimulation of the dsDNA/metallointercalator adduct will induce the generation of photocurrents, underpinning a zero-biased and near zero-background PEC method toward Faradaic detection of non-electrogenic miR at the single-cell level. Using this nanotool, lower miR concentration in the near-nucleus region than that in the main cytosol was revealed.

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