Abstract
Mercury is a widespread pollutant with distinct toxicological profiles, and it exists in a variety of different forms (metallic, ionic, and as part of organic and inorganic salts and complexes). Solvated mercuric ion (Hg), one of the most stable inorganic forms of mercury, is a caustic and carcinogenic material with high cellular toxicity. The most common organic source of mercury, methyl mercury, can accumulate in the human body through the food chain and cause serious and permanent damage to the brain with both acute and chronic toxicity. Methyl mercury is generated by microbial biomethylation in aquatic sediments from water-soluble mercuric ion (Hg). Therefore, routine detection of Hg is central to the environmental monitoring of rivers and larger bodies of water and for evaluating the safety of aquatically derived food supplies. Several methods for the detection of Hg, based upon organic fluorophores or chromophores, semiconductor nanocrystals, cyclic voltammetry, polymeric materials, proteins, and microcantilevers, have been developed. Colorimetric methods, in particular, are extremely attractive because they can be easily read out with the naked eye, in some cases at the point of use. Although there are now several chromophoric colorimetric sensors for Hg, all of them are either limited with respect to sensitivity (current limit of detection 1 mm) and selectivity, kinetically unstable, or incompatible with aqueous environments. Recently, DNA-functionalized gold nanoparticles (DNA– Au NPs) have been used in a variety of forms for the detection of proteins, oligonucleotides, certain metal ions, and other small molecules. DNA–Au NPs have high extinction coefficients (3–5 orders of magnitude higher than those of organic dye molecules) and unique distancedependent optical properties that can be chemically programmed through the use of specific DNA interconnects, which allows one, in certain cases, to detect targets of interest through colorimetric means. Moreover, these structures, when hybridized to complementary particles, exhibit extremely sharp melting transitions, which have been used to enhance the selectivity of detection systems based upon them. By using such an approach, one can typically detect nucleic acid targets in the low nanomolar to high picomolar target concentration range in colorimetric format. The ability to use such particles to detect Hg in the nanomolar concentration range in colorimetric format would be a significant advance, especially when one considers that commercial systems for detecting Hg rely on cumbersome inductively coupled plasma approaches that are not suitable for point-of-use applications. Herein, we present a highly selective and sensitive colorimetric detection method for Hg that relies on thymidine–Hg–thymidine coordination chemistry and complementary DNA–Au NPs with deliberately designed T–T mismatches. When two complementary DNA–Au NPs are combined, they form DNA-linked aggregates that can dissociate reversibly with a concomitant purple-to-red color change. 28] For our novel colorimetric Hg assay, however, we prepared two types of Au NPs (designated as probe A and probe B, see the Supporting Information), each functionalized with different thiolated-DNA sequences (probe A: 5’HS-C10-A10-T-A103’, probe B: 5’HS-C10-T10-T-T103’), which are complementary except for a single thymidine–thymidine mismatch (shown in bold; Scheme 1). Importantly, these particles also form stable aggregates and exhibit the characteristic sharp melting transitions (full width at half maximum< 1 8C) associated with aggregates formed from perfectly complementary particles, but with a lower melting temperature Tm. [17, 18] Since it is known that Hg will coordinate selectively to the bases that make up a T–T mismatch, we hypothesized that Hg would
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have
Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.