Herein, an electrochemiluminescence (ECL) and electrochemical
(EC)
dual-mode biosensor platform with a self-powered DNAzyme walking machine
was established for accurate and sensitive detection of miRNA-21.
By employing a magnesium ion (Mn2+)-dependent DNAzyme cleavage
cycling reaction, the walking machine was built by assembling DNAzyme
walking strands and ferrocene (Fc)-labeled substrate strands on the
Au nanoparticles and graphitic carbon nitride nanosheet (g-C3N4 NS)-covered electrode. The DNAzyme walking strand was
first prohibited by a blocker strand. After the addition of target
miRNA-21 and Mn2+, the DNAzyme walker could be activated
and produce autonomous movements along the electrode track fueled
by Mn2+-dependent DNAzyme-catalyzed substrate cleavage
without additional energy supply. Notably, each walking step resulted
in the cleavage of a substrate strand and the release of a Fc-labeled
DNA strand fragment, allowing us to acquire an extreme ECL signal
recovery of g-C3N4 inhibited by Fc. Meanwhile,
numerous Fc-labeled DNA fragments escaped from the surface of the
electrode, directly producing an obvious decrease in the square wave
voltammetry (SWV) signal from Fc on the same sensing platform. This
work not only avoided difficultly assembling various signal indicators
but also significantly improved the sensitivity through using self-powered
DNAzyme-walker amplification. Moreover, the proposed design employed
the same reaction to produce two signal output modes, which could
eliminate the interference from diverse reactive pathways on the outcome
to mutually improve the accuracy. Therefore, the dual-mode miRNA-21
biosensor exhibited wide detection ranges of 100 aM to 100 nM with
low detection limits of 54.3 and 78.6 aM by ECL and SWV modes, respectively,
which provided an efficient and universal biosensing approach with
extensive applications in early disease diagnosis and bioanalysis.
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