Home
Scholarly Works
Advances in functional nucleic acid based paper...
Journal article

Advances in functional nucleic acid based paper sensors

Abstract

Recently, portable sensing devices with point of care testing (POCT) capability have attracted great attention due to their inherent affordability and accessibility in low resource areas. Paper sensors possess excellent potential as POCT platforms because of low cost, ease of operation, disposability and high-volume manufacturing. Paper sensors that incorporate functional nucleic acids (FNAs) as recognition elements are particularly attractive given that FNAs can be isolated from random-sequence nucleic acid pools to recognize, or respond to, virtually any target of interest. In this review, the advantages of FNAs, particularly DNA aptamers and DNAzymes, as recognition elements for the design of paper sensors are first discussed. This is followed by reviewing three specific types of FNA based paper sensors: dot blots, lateral flow assays, and microfluidic paper-based analytical devices. Furthermore, advances in the signal reporting methods used by FNA based paper sensors are summarized. Finally, limitations of current FNA based paper sensors are discussed along with considerations of future research directions.

Authors

Liu R; McConnell EM; Li J; Li Y

Journal

Journal of Materials Chemistry B, Vol. 8, No. 16, pp. 3213–3230

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Publication Date

April 29, 2020

DOI

10.1039/c9tb02584g

ISSN

2050-750X

Contact the Experts team