Abstract

Simultaneous detection of multiple microRNAs (miRNAs) with high sensitivity can give accurate and reliable information for clinical applications. By uniformly anchoring hairpin probes on the surface of DNA nanolantern, a three-dimensional DNA nanostructure contains abundant and adjustable modification sites, highly integrated DNA nanoprobes were designed and developed as catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA)-based signal amplifiers for enzyme-free signal amplification detection of target miRNAs. The nanolantern-based CHA (NLC) amplifiers, which were facilely prepared via a simple “one-pot” annealing method, showed enhanced biostability, improved cell internalization efficiency, accelerated CHA reaction kinetics, and increased signal amplification capability compared to the single-stranded DNA hairpin probes used in traditional CHA reaction. By co-assembling multiple hairpin probes on a DNA nanolantern surface, as-prepared NLC amplifiers were demonstrated to work well for highly sensitive and specific imaging, expression level fluctuation analysis of two miRNAs in living cells, and miRNAs-guided tumor imaging in living mice. The proposed DNA nanolantern-based nanoamplifier strategy might provide a feasible way to promote the cellular and in vivo applications of nucleic acid probes.

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