Hybridization chain reaction (HCR) is a DNAbased target-induced cascade reaction. Due to its unique enzymefree amplification feature, HCR is often employed for sensing applications. Much like DNA nanostructures that have been designed to respond to a specific stimulus, HCR employs nucleic acids that reconfigure and assemble in the presence of a specific trigger. Despite its standalone capabilities, HCR is highly modular; therefore, it can be advanced and repurposed when coupled with latest discoveries. To this effect, we have developed a gel electrophoresis-based detection approach which combines the signal amplification feature of HCR with the programmability and sensitivity of the CRISPR-Cas12a system. By incorporating CRISPR-Cas12a, we have achieved greater sensitivity and reversed the signal output from TURN OFF to TURN ON. CRISPR-Cas12a also enabled us to rapidly reprogram the assay for the detection of both ssDNA and dsDNA target sequences by replacing a single reaction component in the detection kit. Detection of conserved, both ssDNA and dsDNA, regions of tobacco curly shoot virus (TCSV) and hepatitis B virus (HepBV) genomes is demonstrated with this methodology. This low-cost gel electrophoresis assay can detect as little as 1.5 fmol of the target without any additional target amplification steps and is about 100-fold more sensitive than HCR-alone approach.
A novel combinatorial nanosensor array for miRNA analyses was assembled using the intrinsic noncovalent interactions of unmodified two-dimensional nanoparticles. Discrimination of nine miRNA analogues with as little as a single nucleotide difference was demonstrated under 2 h. All nine targets were identified simultaneously with 95% confidence. The developed nanotechnology offered identification and quantification of unknown targets with unknown concentration. Discrimination of target mixtures from low-to-high ratios was demonstrated. The DNA and RNA analogues of targets were identified using the combinatorial sensory approach. Identification of a target in a complex biological matrix prepared with human urine was demonstrated. The nanosensor array was put together using 15 nanoassemblies (2D-NAs) constructed using three two-dimensional nanoparticles (2D-nps: WS, MoS, and nanographene oxide (nGO)) and five rationally designed fluorescently labeled 15-nt-long ssDNAs (probes). In this approach, each target has only a small yet varying degree of complementarity with each of the five probes adsorbed on the 2D-np surface. The probes in each 2D-NA are desorbed from the surface by each target with a different degree that was recorded with fluorescence recovery measurements. The fluorescence data set was processed by partial least squares discriminant analysis (PLSDA), and each target was discriminated successfully. This new approach has a number of advantages over the classical bind-and-release model, typically used for 2D-np based biosensors, and opens greater detection opportunities with 2D-nps.
We have performed a systematic study to analyze the effect of ssDNA length, nucleobase composition, and the type of two-dimensional nanoparticles (2D-nps) on the desorption response of 36 two-dimensional nanoassemblies (2D-NAs) against several proteins. The studies were performed using fluorescently labeled polyA, polyC, and polyT with 23, 18, 12, and 7 nucleotide-long sequences. The results suggest that the ssDNAs with polyC and longer sequences are more resistant to desorption, compared to their counterparts. In addition, 2D-NAs assembled using WS were least susceptible to desorption by the proteins tested, whereas nGO 2D-NAs were the most susceptible nanoassemblies. Later, the results of these systematic studies were used to construct a sensor array for discrimination of seven model proteins (BSA, lipase, alkaline phosphatase, acid phosphatase, protease, β-galactosidase, and Cytochrome c). Neither the ssDNAs nor the 2D-nps have any specific interaction with the proteins tested. Only the displacement of the ssDNAs from the 2D-np surface was measured upon the disruption of the existing forces within 2D-NAs. A customized sensor array with five 2D-NAs was developed as a result of a careful screening/filtering process. The sensor array was tested against 200 nM of protein targets, and each protein was discriminated successfully. The results suggest that the systematic studies performed using various ssDNAs and 2D-nps enabled the construction of a sensor array without a bind-and-release sensing mechanism. The studies also demonstrate the significance of systematic investigations in the construction of two-dimensional DNA nanoassemblies for functional studies.
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