Abstract

Antibiotic abuse has been bringing serious pollution in water, which is closely related to human health. It is desirable to develop a new strategy for antibiotic detection. To address this problem, a sensitive fluorescent aptasensor for antibiotic detection was developed by utilizing gold nanoparticles modified magnetic bead composites (AuNPs/MBs) and nicking enzyme. AuNPs/MBs were synthesized with the help of polyethylenimine (PEI). The prepared AuNPs/MBs acted as dual-functional scaffolds that owned excellent magnetic separation capacity and strong covalent bio-conjugation. The non-specifically absorbed aptamers in AuNPs/MBs were less than that in MBs. Hence, the fluorescent aptasensor based on AuNPs/MBs show a better signal to background ratio than that based on carboxyl modified magnetic beads (MBs). In this work, ampicillin was employed as a model analyte. In the presence of ampicillin, the specific binding between ampicillin and aptamer induced structure-switching that led to the release of partial complementary DNA (cDNA) of aptamer. Then, the released cDNA initiated the cycle of nicking enzyme assisted signal amplification (NEASA). Therefore, a large amount of taqman probes were cleaved and fluorescence signal was amplified. The prepared fluorescent aptasensor bring sensitive detection in range of 0.1–100 ng mL−1 with the limit of detection of 0.07 ng mL−1. Furthermore, this aptasensor was also successfully applied in real sample detection with acceptable accuracy. The fluorescent aptasensor provides a promising method for efficient, rapid and sensitive antibiotic detection.

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