Abstract

For the early diagnosis of lung cancer, a novel strategy to detect microRNAs encapsulated in exosomes with immunomagnetic isolation was demonstrated for the selective extraction of exo-miRNAs from patient serum. Here, miRNA was captured from lysed exosomes in specially designed capture probe modified magnetic beads, followed by T4 DNA polymerase-mediated in situ formation of chimeric 5′-miRNA-DNA-3′ (Target). The poly-(2,2′:5′,2′′-terthiophene-3′-(p-benzoic acid)) (pTBA)-modified electrode harbors Probe-1 DNA that hybridizes to the 5′ end of the chimera, followed by hybridization of Probe-2 DNA to the 3′ end of the chimera, resulting in the formation of a 20-nucleotide-long dsDNA consensus sequence for p53 protein binding. A bioconjugate composed of p53 and hydrazine assembled on AuNPs (p53-AuNPs-Hyd) recruits the p53 protein to recognize a specific sequence, forming the final sensor probe (pTBA-Probe-1:Target/Probe-2:bioconjugate), where hydrazine functions as an electrocatalyst to generate amperometric signal from the reduction of H2O2. This sensor has double specificity via selective capture of the target in Probe-1 and p53 recognition, which shows excellent analytical performance, revealing a dynamic range between 100 aM and 10 pM with a detection limit of 92 (±0.1) aM. For practical applications, we prepared a multiplexed array sensor to simultaneously detect four exo-miRNAs (miRNA-21, miRNA-155, miRNA-205, and miRNA-let-7b) up to femtomolar levels from 1.0 mL to 125 μL of cell culture (A549, MCF-7 and BEAS-2B) media and lung cancer patient serum samples, respectively.

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