An ultrasensitive fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) bioassay was developed to detect staphylococcal enterotoxin B (SEB), a low molecular exotoxin, using an aptamer-affinity method coupled with upconversion nanoparticles (UCNPs)-sensing, and the fluorescence intensity was prominently enhanced using an exonuclease-catalyzed target recycling strategy. To construct this aptasensor, both fluorescence donor probes (complementary DNA1-UCNPs) and fluorescence quencher probes (complementary DNA2-Black Hole Quencher3 (BHQ3)) were hybridized to an SEB aptamer, and double-strand oligonucleotides were fabricated, which quenched the fluorescence of the UCNPs via FRET. The formation of an aptamer-SEB complex in the presence of the SEB analyte resulted in not only the dissociation of aptamer from the double-strand DNA but also both the disruption of the FRET system and the restoration of the UCNPs fluorescence. In addition, the SEB was liberated from the aptamer-SEB complex using exonuclease I, an exonuclease specific to single-stranded DNA, for analyte recycling by selectively digesting a particular DNA (SEB aptamer). Based on this exonuclease-catalyzed target recycling strategy, an amplified fluorescence intensity could be produced using different SEB concentrations. Using optimized experimental conditions produced an ultrasensitive aptasensor for the detection of SEB, with a wide linear range of 0.001-1 ng mL(-1) and a lower detection limit (LOD) of 0.3 pg mL(-1) SEB (at 3σ). The fabricated aptasensor was used to measure SEB in a real milk samples and validated using the ELISA method. Furthermore, a novel aptasensor FRET assay was established for the first time using 30 mol% Mn(2+) ions doped NaYF4:Yb/Er (20/2 mol%) UCNPs as the donor probes, which suggests that UCNPs are superior fluorescence labeling materials for food safety analysis.
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