Chemiluminescence-based detection methods offer a superior signal-to-noise ratio and are commonly adopted for biosensors. This work presents the design and implementation of a supramolecular assay based on a chemiluminescent chemosensor.… Click to show full abstract
Chemiluminescence-based detection methods offer a superior signal-to-noise ratio and are commonly adopted for biosensors. This work presents the design and implementation of a supramolecular assay based on a chemiluminescent chemosensor. Specifically, an indicator displacement assay (IDA) with the supramolecular host-guest complex of chemiluminescent phenoxy 1,2-dioxetane and cucurbit[8]uril enables the low-micromolar detection of drugs in human urine and human serum samples. Cucurbit[8]uril thereby acts as a non-surfactant chemiluminescence enhancer and a synthetic receptor. Additionally, we show that adding an equimolar amount of cucurbit[8]uril to a commercially available dioxetane used in standard enzymatic chemiluminescence immunoassays enhances the chemiluminescence by more than 15 times. Finally, we demonstrate that a chemiluminescence resonance energy transfer between a unimolecular macrocyclic cucurbit[7]uril-dye conjugate and a phenoxy 1,2-dioxetane can be utilized to detect the herbicide paraquat at a micromolar concentration in aqueous media.
               
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