Abstract

In order to develop a highly sensitive and selective piezoelectric transducer for the detection of DNA, the bio-recognizing probe is for the first time designed by introducing a hairpin structure and a recognition site for EcoRI into an oligonucleotide sequence and signal amplifiers are prepared by modifying gold nanoparticles (GNPs) with biomolecules, deepening the application and understanding of biomaterials. The piezoelectric transducer is prepared by immobilizing designed hairpin recognition probe onto the quartz-crystal-microbalance (QCM). In the absence of target DNA, the hairpin probe is removed from the QCM surface after exposure to endonuclease, inhibiting the subsequent signaling reaction. In contrast, introduction of target DNA can open the hairpin probe due to the probe/target hybridization, dissociating the cleavable double-stranded portion. In this case, even if being treated with endonuclease, the integrated hairpin probe is maintained. Subsequent introduction of GNPs modified with detection probes that can hybridize to the terminal sequence of hairpin probe results in a many-folds increase of the frequency response. Utilizing the proposed transduction scheme, the reliable target DNA detection can be accomplished. The detection limit of 2 pM and dynamic response range for target DNA from 2 to 300 pM are obtained. Furthermore, single-base mismatched DNAs can be easily identified. The developed proof-of-principle of a novel piezoelectric transduction scheme is expected to establish a potential platform for the disease-associated mutation analysis and DNA hybridization detection in biotechnology and medical diagnostics.

Full Text
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