Abstract

Long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) act as the essential regulators in various biological processes, and are becoming potential diagnostic and prognostic biomarkers. Herein, we demonstrate the fabrication of on-bead functional nucleic acid nanowires based on cyclic ligation reaction-driven rolling circle amplification for label-free detection of long noncoding RNAs in breast and lung tissues. The presence of lncRNA activates the cyclic ligation reaction, converting low-abundance target to numerous biotinylated ligation products through repetitive denaturation-hybridization-ligation. The resulting ligation products immobilize on the magnetic bead to initiate the downstream rolling circle amplification (RCA), facilitating the synthesis of long G-quadruplex nanowires. The resultant nanowires can light up Thioflavin T (ThT) to generate a high fluorescence signal. This method displays ultrahigh sensitivity with a limit of detection of 9.97 aM, and it possesses excellent single-base mismatch discrimination capability. Moreover, it can accurately quantify cellular Homeobox (HOX) gene antisense intergenic RNA (HOTAIR) at single-cell level and distinguish the HOTAIR expression level in healthy person and lung/breast cancer patient tissues, holding great promise in clinical diagnosis.

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