Colorimetric and electrochemical detection of ligase through ligation reaction-induced streptavidin assembly

2021 
ABSTRACT We propose a concept for ligase detection by conversion of aggregation-based homogeneous analysis into surface-tethered electrochemical assay through streptavidin (SA)-biotin interaction. Sortase A (SrtA) served as the model analyte and two biotinylated peptides (bio-LPETGG and GGGK-bio) were used as the substrates. SrtA-catalyzed ligation of the peptide substrates led to the generation of bio-LPETGGGK-bio. The ligation product (bio-LPETGGGK-bio) induced the aggregation and color change of SA-modified gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) through the SA-biotin interactions, which could be assayed by the colorimetric method. Furthermore, we found that the bio-LPETGGGK-bio could trigger the assembly of tetrameric SA proteins with the formation of the (SA-bio-LPETGGGK-bio)n assemblies through the same interactions. The above results were further confirmed by atomic force microscopy and fluorescent imaging. The insulated assemblies were in-situ fabricated at the SA-modified gold electrode, thus hindering the electron transfer of [Fe(CN)6]3−/4− and leading to an increase in the electron-transfer resistance. The capability of the method for the detection of SrtA both in vitro and Staphylococcus aureus (S. aureus) has been demonstrated. SrtA with a concentration down to 1 pmol/L has been determined by the electrochemical analysis, which is lower than that achieved by the colorimetric assay (50 pmol/L). By integrating the advantages of homogeneous reaction and heterogeneous detection, the strategy serves as an ideal means for the fabrication of various sensing platforms by adopting biotin-labeled and sequence-specific peptide or nucleic acid substrates.
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