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FeNi-MIL-88B-based electrochemiluminescence immunosensor for ultra-sensitive detection of CD44 protein via dual-quenching strategy.

BACKGROUND: Cluster of Differentiation 44 (CD44) is considered an important biomarker for various cancers, and achieving highly sensitive detection of CD44 is crucial, which plays a significant role in tumor invasion and metastasis, providing essential information for clinical tumor diagnosis. Commonly used methods for analysis include fluorescence spectroscopy (FL), photoelectrochemical analysis (PEC), electrochemical analysis (EC), and commercial ELISA kits. Although these methods offer high sensitivity, they can be relatively complex to perform experimentally. Electrochemiluminescence (ECL) has gained widespread research attention due to its high sensitivity, ease of operation, effective spatiotemporal control, and close to zero background signal.

RESULTS: In this work, a sandwich-type ECL immunosensor for detecting CD44 was constructed using luminol as a luminophore. In this sensing platform, bimetallic MOFs (Pd@FeNi-MIL-88B) loaded with palladium nanoparticles (Pd NPs) were used as a novel enzyme mimic, exhibiting excellent catalytic performance towards the electroreduction of H2 O2 . The hybrids provided a strong support platform for luminol and antibodies, significantly enhancing the initial ECL signal of luminol. Subsequently, core-shell Au@MnO2 nanocomposites were synthesised by gold nanoparticles (Au NPs) encapsulated in manganese dioxide (MnO2 ) thin layers, as labels. In the luminol/H2 O2 system, Au@MnO2 exhibited strong light absorption in the broad UV-vis spectrum, similar to the black body effect, and the scavenging effect of Mn2+ on O2 •- , which achieved the dual-quenching of ECL signal. Under the optimal experimental conditions, the immunosensor demonstrated a detection range of 0.1 pg mL-1 - 100 ng mL-1 , with a detection limit of 0.069 pg mL-1 .

SIGNIFICANCE: Based on Pd@FeNi-MIL-88B nanoenzymes and Au@MnO2 nanocomposites, a dual-quenching sandwich-type ECL immunosensor for the detection of CD44 was constructed. The proposed immunosensor exhibited excellent reproducibility, stability, selectivity, and sensitivity, and provided a valuable analytical strategy and technical platform for the accurate detection of disease biomarkers, and opened up potential application prospects for early clinical treatment.

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