Abstract

As an important enzyme-free amplifier, the hybridization chain reaction (HCR) uses an ssDNA to trigger cycled displacement interactions between substrate hairpins and finally form elongated dsDNA concatamer mixtures. In many cases, to provide a signal probe or advanced function, additional oligonucleotides (named hairpin tails) have to be extended upon classic HCR hairpin substrates, but by doing so the HCR assembly efficiency and signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) may get seriously reduced. In this Article, a rational and general model that may guide the study on HCR functionalization and signaling efficiency is provided. We rationally design a four-hairpin model HCR system (4H-HCR) in which one or more hairpin substrates are appended with additional tails as a signaling probe. After HCR assembly, two adjacent tails are supposedly integrating into a full G-quadruplex structure to provide the evidence or signal for the assembly. A systematic study has been applied to reveal the relationship between the "tail-design" with assembly efficiency and SNR. A clear design rule-set guiding the optimized assembly and signal has been provided for traditional electrophoresis and G-quadruplex-enhanced fluorescence signal. Importantly, solid-state nanopore single molecular detection has been innovatively introduced and recommended as an "antirisk" and "mutual benefit" readout to traditional G-quadruplex signaling. Nanopore detection can provide a clear signal distinguished before and after the HCR reaction, especially when the traditional G-quadruplex-enhanced signal only provides low SNR. The G-quadruplex, in turn, may enhance the nanopore signal amplitude via increasing the diameter of the HCR products.

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