Abstract

Gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) have been widely utilized in developing DNAzyme-functionalized nanosensors, most of which were engineered by attaching the thiolated DNAzymes to Au NPs via Au–S bonding. However, the Au NP-DNAzyme nanosensors always suffer from signal distortion when applied in complex environment with abundant thiols, which poses challenge for practical applications. Here, we focus on addressing the root cause of the issue and propose to decorate the Au NPs with a thin layer of platinum, thus facilitating the conjugation of DNAzymes through Pt–S bonding, a thiol-resistant cross-linking. The Pt–S bond stabilized DNAzyme nanosensor effectively minimized false positive signals when detecting l-histidine in infant formulas, as compared to the Au–S stabilized counterpart. This innovative strategy holds promise for high-fidelity biosensing, improving the practical applicability of Au NP-based DNAzyme nanosensor.

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