Lili Zhou, Guangyue Hou, Dan Xi, Yue Guo, Yanping Gou, Hanlin Li, Yaning Zhang, Yongxin Mo, Xiaoli Dai, Rongjin Xu, Hany S. El-Mesery and Wenjie Lu
{"title":"“On–Off” electrochemical sensing toward mercury pollution in tea via exonuclease III triggered target recycling amplification","authors":"Lili Zhou, Guangyue Hou, Dan Xi, Yue Guo, Yanping Gou, Hanlin Li, Yaning Zhang, Yongxin Mo, Xiaoli Dai, Rongjin Xu, Hany S. El-Mesery and Wenjie Lu","doi":"10.1039/D5AY00683J","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p >Mercury ion (Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small>) pollution in tea poses significant risks to human health due to its high toxicity, bioaccumulation, and potential to cause neurological and kidney damage. Sensitive monitoring of Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small> in tea is therefore critical for food safety and public health. Here, we developed an electrochemical biosensor for ultrasensitive Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small> assay by integrating thymine–Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small>–thymine (T–Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small>–T) mismatch recognition with exonuclease III (EXO III)-assisted dual signal amplification. The sensing mechanism relies on Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small>-triggered formation of T–Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small>–T structures, which activate EXO III to release Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small> for cyclic reuse while generating reporter DNA (RDNA). Signal amplification is further enhanced by MOF(Zr)/Th/AuPt nanocomposites, where the Zr-based metal–organic framework (MOF(Zr)) and AuPt nanoparticles synergistically catalyze thionine (Th) oxidation, producing a strong electrochemical response. This dual-amplification strategy achieves a detection limit of 4.45 pM, surpassing that of conventional methods. The biosensor demonstrates high specificity against interfering metal ions (<em>e.g.</em>, Cd<small><sup>2+</sup></small> and Cu<small><sup>2+</sup></small>) and reliable performance in real tea samples (93.7%∼103.4% recovery), offering a promising tool for monitoring Hg<small><sup>2+</sup></small> contamination in food products.</p>","PeriodicalId":64,"journal":{"name":"Analytical Methods","volume":" 25","pages":" 5292-5297"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2025-06-04","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Analytical Methods","FirstCategoryId":"92","ListUrlMain":"https://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlelanding/2025/ay/d5ay00683j","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"化学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"CHEMISTRY, ANALYTICAL","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Mercury ion (Hg2+) pollution in tea poses significant risks to human health due to its high toxicity, bioaccumulation, and potential to cause neurological and kidney damage. Sensitive monitoring of Hg2+ in tea is therefore critical for food safety and public health. Here, we developed an electrochemical biosensor for ultrasensitive Hg2+ assay by integrating thymine–Hg2+–thymine (T–Hg2+–T) mismatch recognition with exonuclease III (EXO III)-assisted dual signal amplification. The sensing mechanism relies on Hg2+-triggered formation of T–Hg2+–T structures, which activate EXO III to release Hg2+ for cyclic reuse while generating reporter DNA (RDNA). Signal amplification is further enhanced by MOF(Zr)/Th/AuPt nanocomposites, where the Zr-based metal–organic framework (MOF(Zr)) and AuPt nanoparticles synergistically catalyze thionine (Th) oxidation, producing a strong electrochemical response. This dual-amplification strategy achieves a detection limit of 4.45 pM, surpassing that of conventional methods. The biosensor demonstrates high specificity against interfering metal ions (e.g., Cd2+ and Cu2+) and reliable performance in real tea samples (93.7%∼103.4% recovery), offering a promising tool for monitoring Hg2+ contamination in food products.