Issue 72, 2014

Noncovalent assembly of carbon nanoparticles and aptamer for sensitive detection of ATP

Abstract

Coupling carbon nanomaterials with biomolecular recognition events for sensor design has attracted great interest in the development of efficient bioanalytical tools. Here, based on competitive interaction of electrostatic repulsion and π–π stacking, noncovalent assembly of carboxylated carbon nanoparticles (cCNPs) with aptamer that allows sensitive and selective detection of ATP is reported. The sensor exhibits minimal background fluorescence, due to the extraordinarily high quenching efficiency of cCNPs with a spherical structure. Importantly, the quenched fluorescence is recovered with the addition of ATP within several minutes; the limit of detection is as low as 0.1 μM in the range of 0.1–300 μM, since only one end of the aptamer needs the modification, the present approach is simple and cost-effective. Furthermore, compared to the analog design based on the “pre-mixing” strategy, the assay of the “post-mixing” strategy increases by approximately 1.5 times in signal-to-background (S/B) and possesses a quicker response time (within two minutes). Depending on the spherical structure of the cCNPs and the rapid kinetic response, this assay can be expected to provide a new and ultrasensitive platform for the detection of various small molecules.

Graphical abstract: Noncovalent assembly of carbon nanoparticles and aptamer for sensitive detection of ATP

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
12 Jun 2014
Accepted
18 Aug 2014
First published
18 Aug 2014

RSC Adv., 2014,4, 38199-38205

Author version available

Noncovalent assembly of carbon nanoparticles and aptamer for sensitive detection of ATP

J. Liu, J. Yu, J. Chen and K. Shih, RSC Adv., 2014, 4, 38199 DOI: 10.1039/C4RA05631K

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