High Contrast Probe Cleavage Detection
Michael Dubrovsky (1,2), Morgan Blevins (2), Svetlana V. Boriskina, (2), Diedrik Vermeulen ((1) SiPhox Inc., Cambridge, MA, USA, (2), Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA)

TL;DR
This paper introduces High Contrast Cleavage Detection (HCCD), a novel optical biosensing mechanism that amplifies signals through nanoparticle cleavage, enabling highly sensitive, real-time detection of biological molecules with improved specificity.
Contribution
The paper presents the HCCD mechanism that uses nanoparticle cleavage for signal amplification, surpassing traditional affinity assays in sensitivity and specificity.
Findings
HCCD achieves potential attomolar sensitivity.
HCCD provides high signal amplification via nanoparticle cleavage.
The method enhances detection specificity using CRISPR-based collateral cleavage.
Abstract
Photonic biosensors that use optical resonances to amplify signals from refractive index changes offer high-sensitivity, real-time readout, and scalable, low-cost fabrication. However, when used with classic affinity assays they struggle with noise from non-specific binding and are limited by the low refractive index and small size of target biological molecules. In this letter, we introduce the High Contrast Cleavage Detection (HCCD) mechanism, which makes use of dramatic optical signal amplification caused by the cleavage of large numbers of high-contrast nanoparticle reporters instead of the adsorption of labeled or unlabeled low-index biological molecules. We evaluate the advantages of the HCCD detection mechanism over conventional target-capture detection techniques when using the same label and the same photonic biosensor platform and illustrate numerically the possibility for…
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