4.7 Article

Electroactive nanocarbon materials as signaling tags for electrochemical PCR

Journal

TALANTA
Volume 245, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.talanta.2022.123479

Keywords

Polymerase chain reaction; Electrochemistry; Electroactive labels; Electroactive nanocarbon; Genetically modified organisms; Graphene oxide

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education (MOE) Singapore, AcRF Tier 1 grant [RG88/20]
  2. Double-Hundred Program for Foreign Experts of Shandong Province [WST2019011]
  3. Czech Science Foundation [20-16124J]

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Electrochemical polymerase chain reaction (PCR) is a valid alternative to optical-based PCR, with advantages such as reduced costs, simpler instrumentation, and miniaturization and portability of systems. This study compared three different nanographene oxide materials as signaling tags for the detection of genetically modified organisms (GMO) and identified the nanocarbon material with the highest potential for use as an electroactive label in PCR amplification and detection.
Electrochemical polymerase chain reaction (PCR) represents a valid alternative to the optical-based PCR due to reduced costs of signaling labels, use of simpler instrumentation, and possibility of miniaturization and portability of the systems, which can facilitate decentralized detection. The high intrinsic electroactivity and strong linear relationship between the material concentration and its redox signal suggest a possible use of oxidized nanocarbon materials as electroactive tags for PCR. Herein, we compared three different nanographene oxide materials namely nGO-1, nGO-2 and nGO-3 as signaling tags for the detection of genetically modified organisms (GMO) by electrochemical PCR. The three materials differ in size, chemical composition as well as type and amount of oxygen functionalities verified by extensive characterization with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), attenuated total reflectance Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and electrochemical methods. A sense primer sequence belonging to the Cauliflower Mosaic Virus 35S promoter (a common genetic marker for GMO screening) was used to conjugate to the nanocarbon materials by carbodiimide chemistry before PCR amplification with a biotinylated antisense strand. Finally, the amplified electroactive PCR product was detected, where the reduction signal derived from the electrochemically reducible oxygenated functionalities on the nanocarbon material surface was directly correlated to the presence of GMO. Overall, we were able to correlate the different material characteristics with their performance as electroactive labels and identify the nanocarbon material that exhibits the highest potential to be used as innovative electroactive label for PCR in the amplification and detection of the selected target sequence.

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