A perovskite‐based electrochemiluminescence aptasensor for tetracycline screening

Tetracyclines are currently the most commonly used class of antibiotics, and their residue issue significantly impacts public health safety. In this study, a surface modification of perovskite with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide led to the generation of stable electrochemiluminescence (ECL) emitters...

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Veröffentlicht in:Luminescence (Chichester, England) England), 2024-03, Vol.39 (3), p.e4717-n/a
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Yuxin, Zhong, Xinyi, Yang, Qiling, Chen, Huiping, Hao, Nan, Hu, Shanwen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Tetracyclines are currently the most commonly used class of antibiotics, and their residue issue significantly impacts public health safety. In this study, a surface modification of perovskite with cetyltrimethylammonium bromide led to the generation of stable electrochemiluminescence (ECL) emitters in aqueous systems and improved the biocompatibility of perovskite. A perovskite quantum dot‐based ECL sensing strategy was developed. Utilizing the corresponding aptamer of the antibiotics, strain displacement reactions were triggered, disrupting the ECL quenching system composed of perovskite and Ag nanoclusters (Ag NCs) on the electrode surface, generating a signal to achieve quantitative detection of several common tetracycline antibiotics. The perovskite quantum dot provided a strong and stable initial signal, while the efficient catalytic activity of the silver cluster enhanced the recognition sensitivity. Tetracycline, chlortetracycline, and oxytetracycline were used as examples to demonstrate the differentiation and quantitative detection through this method. In addition, the aptasensor exhibited analytical performance with the linear range (0.1–10 μM OTC) and good recovery rates of 94.7% to 101.6% in real samples. This approach has the potential to become a sensitive and practical approach for assessing antibiotic residues. A new type of ECL aptasensor based on surface‐modified water‐soluble perovskite is designed for the biosensing of tetracyclines.
ISSN:1522-7235
1522-7243
DOI:10.1002/bio.4717