Abstract

This work describes a quantitative method to detect DNA damage in the presence of Pb and Cd ions using a surface modified microarray chip and a laser induced fluorescence microscopy (LIFM). The detection was carried out by the immobilization of a single-stranded DNA oligomer, tagged with a Cy5 fluorophore on a polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) microarray chip followed by LIFM. Sulfosuccinimidyl-4-(N-maleimidomethyl) cyclohexane-1-carboxylate (Sulfo-SMCC) was attached as a cross-linker via the formation of covalent amide bonds. Then, the single-stranded DNA oligomer containing Cy5 as a fluorophore and thiol functional groups at both terminals, was bonded to the linker by reaction with sulfhydryl group. As the DNA oligomers were reacted with metal ions of Pb and Cd, the un-cleaved DNA oligomers were quantitatively identified by monitoring Cy5 fluorescence. Cadmium showed a quenching constant of 0.84 in the Stern–Volmer plot, whereas lead gave 0.22, indicating that cadmium ions suppress fluorescence more than lead ions. When optimized, fluorescence reductions of 23% (±2.1) for Pb and 25% (±1.4) for Cd were observed in air and decreased to almost <5.0% in a radical scavenger of 5mM. The cleaved DNA was also confirmed by MALDI-TOF-MS. In result, this experimental method using a microarray chip with surface modification provided quantitative determination of DNA oligomer damage with reproducible results, significantly reduced sample volumes and analysis times.

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