Abstract

Exploiting the specific recognition probe for all of the biomolecules is difficult in "lock-and-key" biosensors. The cross-reaction or the semispecific probe in pattern recognition mode is an alternative strategy through extracting a multidimensional signal array from recognition elements. Here, we design a pattern recognition sensor array based on the alkaloid-inhibited catalytic activity of dopzymes for the discrimination and determination of six alkaloids. In this sensor array, three different G-rich sequences, i.e., G-triplex (G3), G-quadruplex (GQ1), and the G-quadruplex dimer (2GQ1) possessing various peroxidase activities, conjugated with a dopamine aptamer and the dopzymes (G3-d-apt, GQ1-d-apt, and 2GQ1-d-apt) were obtained with an enhanced catalytic performance for the substrate. Through the interactions between six target alkaloids and G3, GQ1, and 2GQ1 regions, the pattern signal (6 alkaloids × 3 dopzymes × 5 replicates) was obtained from the diverse inhibited effect for the dopzyme activity. In virtue of the statistical method principal component analysis (PCA), the data array was projected into a new dimensional space to acquire the three-dimensional (3D) canonical scores and grouped into their respective clusters. The sensor array exhibited an outstanding discrimination and classification capability for six alkaloids with different concentrations with 100% accuracy. In addition, the nonspecific recognition elements of the sensor array showed high selectivity even though other alkaloids with similar structures to targets existed in the samples. Importantly, the levels of the six targets can be analyzed by the most influential discrimination factor, which represented the vector with the highest variance, evidencing that the sensor array has potential in drug screening and clinical treatment.

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