Sulfonamide antibiotics (SAs) are widely used in animal husbandry and aquaculture, and the excess residues of SAs in animal-derived foods will harm the health of consumers. In reality, various SAs were alternately used in animal husbandry and aquaculture, and thus, it is urgent need to develop simple and high-throughput methods for simultaneously detecting multiple SAs or groups of SAs in order to realize rapid screening of total SAs residues in animal-derived foods. We herein isolated a broad-specificity aptamer for SAs by using a multi-SAs systematic evolution of ligands by exponential enrichment (SELEX) strategy. The isolated broad-specificity aptamer has a higher binding affinity to five different SAs including sulfaquinoxaline (SQ), sulfamethoxypyridazine (SMPZ), sulfametoxydiazine (SMD), sulfachloropyridazine (SCP), and sulfapyridine (SPD) and, thus, can be used as a bioreceptor for developing various high-throughput methods for the simultaneous detection or rapid screening of above five SAs. Based on the isolated broad-specificity aptamer and Cy7 (diethylthiatricarbocyanine) displacement strategy, a colorimetric aptasensor was developed for the simultaneous detection of SQ, SMPZ, SMD, SCP, and SPD with a visual detection limit of 2.0–5.0 μM and a spectrometry detection limit of 0.2–0.5 μM. The colorimetric aptasensor was successfully used to detect SQ, SMPZ, SMD, SCP, and SPD in fish muscle with a recovery of 82%–92% and a RSD (n = 5) < 7%. The success of this study provided a promising bioreceptor for developing various high-throughput methods for on-site rapid screening of multiple SAs residues, as well as a simple method for the rapid and cost-effective screening of total SQ, SMPZ, SMD, SCP, and SPD in seafood.
Aptamers are single-stranded oligonucleotides isolated in vitro that bind specific targets with high affinity and are commonly used as receptors in biosensors. Aptamer-based dye-displacement assays are a promising sensing platform because they are label-free, sensitive, simple, and rapid. However, these assays can exhibit impaired sensitivity in biospecimens, which contain numerous interferents that cause unwanted absorbance, scattering, and fluorescence in the UV−vis region. Here, this problem is overcome by utilizing near-infrared (NIR) signatures of the dye 3,3′-diethylthiadicarbocyanine iodide (Cy5). Cy5 initially complexes with aptamers as monomers and dimers; aptamer-target binding displaces the dye into solution, resulting in the formation of J-aggregates that provide a detectable NIR signal. The generality of our assay is demonstrated by detecting three different small-molecule analytes with their respective DNA aptamers at clinically relevant concentrations in serum and urine. These successful demonstrations show the utility of dye-aptamer NIR biosensors for highthroughput detection of analytes in clinical specimens.
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