Ultrasensitive aptamer biosensor for arsenic(III) detection in aqueous solution based on surfactant-induced aggregation of gold nanoparticles

This paper reports the colorimetric and resonance scattering (RS)-based biosensor for the ultrasensitive detection of As(III) in aqueous solution via aggregating gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) by the special interactions between arsenic-binding aptamer, target and cationic surfactant. Aptamers and the c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analyst (London) 2012-09, Vol.137 (18), p.4171-4178
Hauptverfasser: Wu, Yuangen, Liu, Le, Zhan, Shenshan, Wang, Faze, Zhou, Pei
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container_issue 18
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creator Wu, Yuangen
Liu, Le
Zhan, Shenshan
Wang, Faze
Zhou, Pei
description This paper reports the colorimetric and resonance scattering (RS)-based biosensor for the ultrasensitive detection of As(III) in aqueous solution via aggregating gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) by the special interactions between arsenic-binding aptamer, target and cationic surfactant. Aptamers and the cationic surfactant could assemble to form a supramolecule, which prevented AuNPs from aggregating due to the exhaustion of cationic surfactant. The introduction of As(III) specifically interacted with the arsenic-binding aptamer to form the aptamer-As(III) complex, so that the following cationic surfactant could aggregate AuNPs and cause the remarkable change in color and RS intensity. The results of circular dichroism (CD) and scanning probe microscope (SPM) testified to the formation of the supramolecule and aptamer-As(III) complex, and the observation of transmission electron microscope (TEM) further confirmed that the aggregation of AuNPs could be controlled by the interactions among the aptamer, As(III) and cationic surfactant. The variations of absorbance and RS intensity were exponentially related to the concentration of As(III) in the range from 1 to 1500 ppb, with the detection limit of 40 ppb for the naked eye, 0.6 ppb for colorimetric assay and 0.77 ppb for RS assay. Additionally, the speed of the present biosensor was rapid, and it also exhibited high selectivity over other metal ions with an excellent recovery for detection in real water samples, suggesting that the proposed biosensor will play an important role in environmental detection.
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Aptamers and the cationic surfactant could assemble to form a supramolecule, which prevented AuNPs from aggregating due to the exhaustion of cationic surfactant. The introduction of As(III) specifically interacted with the arsenic-binding aptamer to form the aptamer-As(III) complex, so that the following cationic surfactant could aggregate AuNPs and cause the remarkable change in color and RS intensity. The results of circular dichroism (CD) and scanning probe microscope (SPM) testified to the formation of the supramolecule and aptamer-As(III) complex, and the observation of transmission electron microscope (TEM) further confirmed that the aggregation of AuNPs could be controlled by the interactions among the aptamer, As(III) and cationic surfactant. The variations of absorbance and RS intensity were exponentially related to the concentration of As(III) in the range from 1 to 1500 ppb, with the detection limit of 40 ppb for the naked eye, 0.6 ppb for colorimetric assay and 0.77 ppb for RS assay. 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The variations of absorbance and RS intensity were exponentially related to the concentration of As(III) in the range from 1 to 1500 ppb, with the detection limit of 40 ppb for the naked eye, 0.6 ppb for colorimetric assay and 0.77 ppb for RS assay. 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source Royal Society of Chemistry Journals Archive (1841-2007); MEDLINE; Royal Society Of Chemistry Journals 2008-; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Analytical chemistry
Applied sciences
Aptamers, Nucleotide - chemistry
Arsenic - analysis
Biological and medical sciences
Biosensing Techniques
Biosensors
Biotechnology
Chemistry
Colorimetry
Exact sciences and technology
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
General, instrumentation
Global environmental pollution
Gold - chemistry
Limit of Detection
Metal Nanoparticles - chemistry
Methods. Procedures. Technologies
Pollution
Spectrometric and optical methods
Surface-Active Agents
Various methods and equipments
Water - chemistry
title Ultrasensitive aptamer biosensor for arsenic(III) detection in aqueous solution based on surfactant-induced aggregation of gold nanoparticles
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