4.6 Article

Multifunctional Nanoparticle Platform for Surface Accumulative Nucleic Acid Amplification and Rapid Electrochemical Detection: An Application to Pathogenic Coronavirus

Journal

ACS SENSORS
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 839-847

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acssensors.2c02512

Keywords

DNA-functionalized nanoparticles; magnetic responsibility; gene amplification; electrochemical assay; nucleic acid biosensor; coronavirus; molecular diagnosis

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A new nucleic acid amplification method called nanoparticle-based surface localized amplification (nSLAM) is combined with electrochemical detection (ECD) to develop a nucleic acid biosensor platform that overcomes limitations in other methods and exhibits high sensitivity for emerging pathogens like the coronavirus.
Of various molecular diagnostic assays, the real-time reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction is considered the gold standard for infection diagnosis, despite critical drawbacks that limit rapid detection and accessibility. To confront these issues, several nanoparticle-based molecular detection methods have been developed to a great extent, but still possess several challenges. In this study, a novel nucleic acid amplification method termed nanoparticle- based surface localized amplification (nSLAM) is paired with electrochemical detection (ECD) to develop a nucleic acid biosensor platform that overcomes these limitations. The system uses primer-functionalized Fe3O4-Au core-shell nanoparticles for nucleic acid amplification, which promotes the production of amplicons that accumulate on the nanoparticle surfaces, inducing significantly amplified currents during ECD that identify the presence of target genetic material. The platform, applying to the COVID-19 model, demonstrates an exceptional sensitivity of similar to 1 copy/mu L for 35 cycles of amplification, enabling the reduction of amplification cycles to 4 cycles (similar to 7 min runtime) using 1 fM complementary DNA. The nSLAM acts as an accelerator that actively promotes and participates in the nucleic acid amplification process through direct polymerization and binding of amplicons on the nanoparticle surfaces. This ultrasensitive fast-response system is a promising method for detecting emerging pathogens like the coronavirus and can be extended to detect a wider variety of biomolecules.

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