Issue 9, 2009

A regenerative electrochemical sensor based on oligonucleotide for the selective determination of mercury(ii)

Abstract

We have developed a selective, sensitive, and re-usable electrochemical sensor for Hg2+ ion detection. This sensor is based on the Hg2+-induced conformational change of a single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) which involves an electroactive, ferrocene-labeled DNA hairpin structure and provides strategically the selective binding of a thymine–thymine mismatch for the Hg2+ ion. The ferrocene-labeled DNA is self-assembled through S–Au bonding on a polycrystalline gold electrode surface and the surface blocked with 3-mercapto-1-propanol to form a mixed monolayer. The modified electrode showed a voltammetric signal due to a one-step redox reaction of the surface-confined ferrocenyl moiety. The ‘signal-on’ upon mercury binding could be attributed to a change in the conformation of ferrocene-labeled DNA from an open structure to a restricted hairpin structure. The differential pulse voltammetry (DPV) of the modified electrode showed a linear response of the ferrocene oxidation signal with increase of Hg2+ concentration in the range between 0.1 and 2 µM with a detection limit of 0.1 µM. The molecular beacon mercury(II) ion sensor was amenable to regeneration by simply unfolding the ferrocene-labeled DNA in 10 µM cysteine, and could be regenerated with no loss in signal gain upon subsequent mercury(II) ion binding.

Graphical abstract: A regenerative electrochemical sensor based on oligonucleotide for the selective determination of mercury(ii)

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Apr 2009
Accepted
10 Jun 2009
First published
25 Jun 2009

Analyst, 2009,134, 1857-1862

A regenerative electrochemical sensor based on oligonucleotide for the selective determination of mercury(II)

D. Han, Y. Kim, J. Oh, T. H. Kim, R. K. Mahajan, J. S. Kim and H. Kim, Analyst, 2009, 134, 1857 DOI: 10.1039/B908457F

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