Coreactant-free
electrochemiluminescence (ECL) is promising
for
removing the exogenous effects of coreactant and simplify the operation
procedures and setups of commercialized ECL bioassays. Herein, an
electrosterically involved strategy for achieving a low-triggering-potential
(+0.21 V vs Ag/AgCl) and coreactant-free ECL from dual-stabilizer-capped
CdTe nanocrystals (NCs) is proposed with mercaptopropionic acid (MPA)
and hexametaphosphate (HMP) as the capping agents of luminophores.
Upon employing the CdTe NCs as the ECL tag for the immunoassay, all
the tags in the bioconjugates of the CdTe NCs and the secondary antibody
(Ab2|CdTe) as well as in the final achieved sandwich-type
immunocomplexes can exhibit efficient coreactant-free ECL with an
electrosterically involved triggering potential nature. The bioconjugates
of Ab2|CdTe with Ab2 no more than 30 kDa, such
as the thyroid stimulating hormone (30 kDa) and the recombinant pro-gastrin
releasing peptide (ProGRP, 14 kDa), merely exhibit coreactant-free
ECL around +0.24 V, while bioconjugates of Ab2|CdTe with
an Ab2 beyond 30 kDa only give off coreactant-free ECL
around +0.82 V. Due to the further enhanced electrosteric effect in
sandwich-type immunocomplexes, only the ECL immunosensor with ProGRP
as the target can give off coreactant-free ECL around +0.24 V. The
electrosterically involved and coreactant-free ECL of CdTe NCs is
consequently utilized to sensitively and selectively determine the
molecular protein ProGRP, which demonstrates a wide linearity range
from 0.1 to 2000 pg/mL and a low limit of detection at 0.05 pg/mL
(S/N = 3). This low-triggering-potential and coreactant-free combined
ECL platform indicates that engineering the surface of CdTe NCs with
a protein can improve the performance of ECL tags in a protein-weight-involved
electrosterical way.
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