Nanobody-based electrochemical competitive immunosensor for the detection of AFB1 through AFB1-HCR as signal amplifier
A novel nanobody (Nb)-based voltammetric immunosensor coupled with horseradish peroxidase concatemer–modified hybridization chain reaction (HRP-HCR) signal amplifying system is described to realize the rapid and ultrasensitive detection of AFB 1 . To design such an immunoassay, anti-AFB 1 Nbs with s...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Mikrochimica acta (1966) 2020-06, Vol.187 (6), Article 352 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | A novel nanobody (Nb)-based voltammetric immunosensor coupled with horseradish peroxidase concatemer–modified hybridization chain reaction (HRP-HCR) signal amplifying system is described to realize the rapid and ultrasensitive detection of AFB
1
. To design such an immunoassay, anti-AFB
1
Nbs with smaller molecular size were coated densely onto the surface of Au nanoparticle-tungsten disulfide-multi-walled carbon nanotubes (AuNPs/WS
2
/MWCNTs) functional nanocomposites as an effective molecular recognition element, whereas AFB
1
-streptavidin (AFB
1
-SA) conjugates were ingeniously bound with biotinylated HCR dsDNA nanostructures as the competitor, amplifier, and signal report element. In the presence of AFB
1
targets, a competitive immunoreaction was performed between the analyte and AFB
1
-SA-labeled HCR (AFB
1
-HCR) platform. Upon the addition of SA-modified polyHRP (SA-polyHRP), AFB
1
-HCR nanostructures containing abundant biotins were allowed to cross-link to a quantity of HRP by streptavidin−biotin chemistry for signal amplification and signal conversion. Under optimal conditions, the immunosensor displayed a good linear correlation toward AFB
1
ranging from 0.5 to 10 ng mL
−1
with a sensitivity of 2.7 μA • (mL ng
−1
) and an ultralow limit of detection (LOD) of 68 fg mL
−1
. The specificity test showed that the AFB
1
immunosensor had no obvious cross-reaction with OTA, DON, ZEN, and FB
1
. The signal of this sensor decreased by 10.18% in 4 weeks indicating satisfactory stability, and its intra- and inter-laboratory reproducibility was 3.42~10.35% and 4.03%~12.11%, respectively. This biosensing system will open up new opportunities for the detection of AFB
1
in food safety and environmental analysis and extend a wide range of applications in the analysis of other small molecules.
Graphical abstract |
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ISSN: | 0026-3672 1436-5073 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00604-020-04343-2 |