Agriculture and Forestry University
ORCID: 0000-0003-2296-4225Publishes on Advanced biosensing and bioanalysis techniques, Biosensors and Analytical Detection, CRISPR and Genetic Engineering. 20 papers and 427 citations.
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Clinical pathogen diagnostics detect targets by qPCR (but with low sensitivity) or blood culturing (but time-consuming). Here we leverage a dual-stem-loop DNA amplifier to enhance non-specific collateral enzymatic cleavage of an oligonucleotide linker between a fluophore and its quencher by CRISPR-CasΦ, achieving ultrasensitive target detection. Specifically, the target pathogens are lysed to release DNA, which binds its complementary gRNA in CRISPR-CasΦ to activate the collateral DNA-cleavage capability of CasΦ, enabling CasΦ to cleave the stem-loops in the amplifier. The cleavage product binds its complementary gRNA in another CRISPR-CasΦ to activate more CasΦ. The activated CasΦ collaterally cleaves the linker, releasing the fluophore to recover its fluorescent signal. The cycle of stem-loop-cleavage/CasΦ-activation/fluorescence-recovery amplifies the detection signal. Our target amplification-free collateral-cleavage-enhancing CRISPR-CasΦ method (TCC), with a detection limit of 0.11 copies/μL, demonstrates enhanced sensitivity compared to qPCR. It can detect pathogenic bacteria as low as 1.2 CFU/mL in serum within 40 min.
microspheres, respectively. Combined with the Mott-Schottky curve and the active species capture experiments, a possible Z-scheme photogenerated carrier transfer mechanism is proposed. This study provides a method for the development and design of Z-scheme heterojunction photocatalysts in the field of wastewater purification.