A Ratiometric Fluorescence Biosensor for Detection of Alkaline Phosphatase Via an Advanced Chemometric Model

J Fluoresc. 2023 Oct 23. doi: 10.1007/s10895-023-03445-3. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

In this paper, a ratiometric fluorescence biosensor was introduced for alkaline phosphatase (ALP) detection based on 2-aminopurine (2-Amp) and thioflavin T (ThT)-G-quadruplex system. We designed a special DNA (5'-AGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGTTAGGGAAA/i2-Amp/AAAA-PO4-3', AP) modified with a phosphate moiety at the 3'-end, G-quadruplex at the 5'-end, and a fluorophore (2-Amp) in the middle. In the absence of ALP, the G-rich AP strand could be prone to fold into G-quadruplex structures in the presence of K+. Then, ThT combined with G-quandruplex, resulting in the enhancement of fluorescence emission peak at 485 nm. However, ALP-mediated hydrolysis of the 3'-phosphoryl end promoted the cleavage of AP by the exonuclease I (Exo I), releasing 2-Amp which displayed a strong fluorescence emission peak at 365 nm. Moreover, the quantitative fluorescence model (QFM) was derived for the analysis of the fluorescence measurements obtained by the proposed ratiometric fluorescent biosensor. With the aid of the advanced model, the proposed ratiometric fluorescent biosensor possessed satisfactory results for the detection of ALP in the human serum samples, with accuracy comparable to that of the reference method-the commercial ALP assay kit. Under the optimized experimental conditions, this method exhibited good selectivity and higher sensitivity, and the detection limit was found to be as low as 0.017 U/L. Therefore, it is reasonable to expect that the method had a great potential to detect ALP quantitatively in clinical diagnosis.

Keywords: Alkaline phosphatase; Quantitative fluorescence model; Ratiometric fluorescence biosensor.