Metal–Organic Framework-Loaded Engineering DNAzyme for the Self-Powered Amplified Detection of MicroRNA
Jiaxin Su, Jinya Du, Rujiao Ge, Chenyang Sun, Yuchun Qiao, Wei Wei, Xuejiao Pang, Yufan Zhang, Huiting Lu, Haifeng Dong
Abstract
DNAzyme shows great promise in designing a highly sensitive and specific sensing platform; however, the low cellular uptake efficiency, instability, and especially the insufficient cofactor supply inhibit the intracellular molecule sensor applications. Herein, we demonstrate a novel type of DNAzyme-based self-driven intracellular sensor for microRNA (miRNA) detection in living cells. The sensor consists of a metal–organic framework [zeolite imidazole framework (ZIF-8)] core loaded with a shell consisting of a rationally designed DNAzyme, where the substrate strand is modified with FAM and BHQ-1 nearby both the sides of the restriction site, respectively, while the enzyme strand consists of two separate strands with a complementary fragment to the substrate strand and the targeting miRNA, respectively. The ZIF-8 nanoparticles enable the efficient delivery of DNAzyme into the cell and protect the DNAzyme from degradation. The pH-responsive ZIF-8 degradation is accompanied with the release of the DNAzyme and Zn2+ cofactors, and the intracellular target miRNAs recognize and activate the DNAzyme driven by the Zn2+ cofactors to cleave the substrate strand, resulting in the release of the FAM-labeled shorter product strand and increased fluorescence for miRNA detection. The self-driven approach can be generally applied to various miRNAs’ detection through DNAzyme engineering.