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Rapid, sensitive, and reliable nucleic acid assay is crucial for the molecular diagnosis of many diseases. For high sensitivity, conventional techniques require time-consuming, high-cost, and complicated procedures, such as enzymatic gene amplification, labeling, and purification, limiting their applications to point-of-care diagnostics. Herein we report a new DNA nanoprobe based on the dual effects of target-specific plasmon-enhanced fluorescence and off-target plasmonic quenching. Janus gold half-shell/polystyrene nanospheres (hsAu/PSs, ∼150 nm diameter) are tethered with capture single-stranded DNA (ssDNA), coupled with a fluorophore-conjugated reporter ssDNA through sandwich-type hybridization with target DNA, resulting in 5-fold increase through plasmon-enhanced fluorescence. Smaller gold nanoparticles (∼13 nm diameter) are subsequently introduced as quenchers to reduce background fluorescence from unhybridized reporter ssDNA, increasing the sensitivity about 10 times. The limit of detection of the dual-mode plasmonic DNA nanoprobe is 16 pM at room temperature in 1 h for the target gene of Klebsiella pneumoniae carbapenemase. The nanoprobe also exhibits a high selectivity enough to discriminate a single-base difference in the target gene. Our strategy harnesses both of the plasmon-mediated fluorescence enhancement and quenching effects through the sophisticated design of nanoscale colloids, which opens a promising avenue to the enzyme-free, simple, sensitive, and selective detection of pathogenic DNA.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bios.2022.114288 | DOI Listing |
Nanoscale
August 2025
Laboratoire de Bioimagerie et Pathologies, UMR 7021 CNRS, Faculté de Pharmacie, Université de Strasbourg, 67401 Illkirch, France.
DNA-functionalized nanoparticles (NPs), called spherical nucleic acids (SNAs), have attracted considerable attention due to their unique properties and numerous applications. In particular, DNA-functionalized dye-loaded polymeric NPs (DNA-NPs), owing to their exceptional fluorescence brightness, have emerged as powerful nanomaterials for the ultrasensitive detection and imaging of nucleic acids. Herein, we addressed a fundamental question unexplored for polymeric DNA-NPs: how does the dense packing of oligonucleotides on the particle surface impact their capacity to specifically hybridize with complementary sequences? Using Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between DNA-NPs and labelled complementary strands, we found that the DNA on the surface of the NPs exhibits dramatic enhancement in duplex stability compared to free DNA duplexes (>20 °C).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosens Bioelectron
December 2025
State Key Laboratory of Medicinal Chemical Biology, College of Pharmacy, Frontiers Science Center for Cell Responses, Nankai University, Tianjin, 300350, China; Haihe Laboratory of Synthetic Biology, Tianjin, 300308, China. Electronic address:
Gene detection of bacterial pathogens is vital for accurate and sensitive in vitro diagnostics (IVD), but the challenge remains in developing precise and sensitive nanoprobe technology for effective noninvasive testing. Herein, we innovate a new nanoprobe to achieve noninvasive precise and selective DNA capture and detection. Streptavidin-functionalized Metal-Organic Frameworks (MOFs) are developed by dynamic defect generation strategy, ensuring that biotinylated capture nanoprobes designed for gene(resistance genes and virulence genes) detection of Helicobacter pylori (H.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnal Chim Acta
October 2025
School of Forensic Medicine, Shanxi Medical University, Taiyuan, 030001, China; Shanxi Key Laboratory of Forensic Medicine, Jinzhong, 030600, China. Electronic address:
Bloodstains are the most common biological specimens at a crime scene. Rapid and sensitive species and sex identification from bloodstains can expedite crime investigation. Nevertheless, time-consuming protocols and specialized equipment are often required in forensic practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiosens Bioelectron
November 2025
The Key Laboratory of Biomedical Information Engineering of Ministry of Education, School of Life Science and Technology, Xi'an Jiaotong University, Xi'an, 710049, China. Electronic address:
Precious metal nanomaterials (PMNMs) have limited applications due to their ease of aggregation, monofunctionality and potential toxicity. However, the sequence programmability, biocompatibility and multifunctional integration of DNA enable DNA-modified PMNMs to combine the properties of both DNA and PMNMs have a wider range of applications in the field of biosensing. This paper reviews the research on the application of DNA-modified PMNMs grown in biosensing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFACS Appl Mater Interfaces
August 2025
State Key Laboratory of Radiation Medicine and Protection, School for Radiological and Interdisciplinary Sciences (RAD-X) and Collaborative Innovation Center of Radiation Medicine of Jiangsu Higher Education Institutions, Soochow University, Suzhou 215123, China.
Uranium poses severe health risks due to its chemo- and radiotoxicities, particularly during nuclear accidents. Despite recent advances in uranyl decorporation agents, clinically effective agents remain scarce. The optimization of uranium decorporation agents is severely impeded partially because the current assessment methods are complicated and time-consuming, which often results in delayed feedback.
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