Abstract
Saxitoxin is one of the most harmful paralytic shellfish toxins due to its high toxicity and adverse effects on the environment and human health. Aptasensors provide simple detection procedures because they have the advantages of chemical stability, easy synthesis and modification, and high convenience in signal transformation. Surface-enhanced Raman scattering (SERS) is an analytical technique that amplifies the analytical signals of molecules at extremely low concentrations, or even at the single molecule level, when the analyte is very close to rough metal surfaces or nanostructures. In this study, an SERS aptasensor is reported for the determination of saxitoxin for the first time. The optimized saxitoxin aptamer (M-30f) was modified on gold nanoparticles and served as the recognition element. Crystal violet was used as the Raman reporter without chemical bounding. The analytical principles of the aptasensor are that saxitoxin destabilized the conformations of the aptamer at high temperature conditions and altered the binding of crystal violet on the gold nanoparticles. In the presence of saxitoxin, the conformation of aptamer containing the G-quadruplex that selectively bound crystal violet unfolded to a large extent and hence the crystal violet molecules were released from gold nanoparticles with a reduced SERS signal. The effects of the gold nanoparticle size, the amount of DNA, aptamer density, sodium chloride concentration, and operation temperature upon the SERS determination were optimized. The resulting simple SERS aptasensor was developed with a satisfactory limit of detection (11.7 nM) and selectivity. The application for the analysis of real shellfish samples with simple procedures demonstrates that this SERS aptasensor is promising for on-site applications.
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