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Programmable, Multiplexed DNA Circuits Supporting Clinically Relevant, Electrochemical Antibody Detection
Author(s) -
Sara Bracaglia,
Simona Ranallo,
Kevin W. Plaxco,
Francesco Ricci
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
acs sensors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.055
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2379-3694
DOI - 10.1021/acssensors.1c00790
Subject(s) - antibody , crosstalk , detection limit , dna , nucleic acid , multiplexing , chemistry , combinatorial chemistry , nanotechnology , computer science , materials science , biology , biochemistry , immunology , electronic engineering , chromatography , engineering , telecommunications
Current health emergencies have highlighted the need to have rapid, sensitive, and convenient platforms for the detection of specific antibodies. In response, we report here the design of an electrochemical DNA circuit that responds quantitatively to multiple specific antibodies. The approach employs synthetic antigen-conjugated nucleic acid strands that are rationally designed to induce a strand displacement reaction and release a redox reporter-modified strand upon the recognition of a specific target antibody. The approach is sensitive (low nanomolar detection limit), specific (no signal is observed in the presence of non-targeted antibodies), and selective (the platform can be employed in complex media, including 90% serum). The programmable nature of the strand displacement circuit makes it also versatile, and we demonstrate here the detection of five different antibodies, including three of which are clinically relevant. Using different redox reporters, we also show that the antibody-responsive circuit can be multiplexed and responds to different antibodies in the same solution without crosstalk.

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