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An Optical Biosensor-Based Quantification of the Microcystin Synthetase A Gene: Early Warning of Toxic Cyanobacterial Blooming.

Analytical Chemistry 2018 Februrary 7
The monitoring and control of toxic cyanobacterial strains, which can produce microcystins, is critical to protect human and ecological health. We herein reported an optical-biosensor-based quantification of the microcystin synthetase A (mcyA) gene so as to discriminate microcystin-producing strains from nonproducing strains. In this assay, the mcyA-specific ssDNA probes were designed in silico with an on-line tool and then synthesized to be covalently immobilized on an optical-fiber surface. Production of fluorescently modified target DNA fragment amplicons was accomplished through the use of Cy5-tagged deoxycytidine triphosphates (dCTPs) in the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) method, which resulted in copies with internally labeled multiple sites per DNA molecule and delivered great sensitivity. With a facile surface-based hybridization process, the PCR amplicons were captured on the optical-fiber surface and were induced by an evanescent-wave field into fluorescence emission. Under the optimum conditions, the detection limit was found to be 10 pM (S/N ratio = 3) and equaled 103 gene copies/mL. The assay was triumphantly demonstrated for PCR amplicons of mcyA detection and showed satisfactory stability and reproducibility. Moreover, the sensing system exhibited excellent selectivity with quantitative spike recoveries from 87 to 102% for M. aeruginosa species in the mixed samples. There results confirmed that the method would serve as an accurate, cost-effective, and rapid technique for in-field testing of toxic Microcystis sp. in water, giving early information for water quality monitoring against microcystin-producing cyanobacteria.

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