Abstract: | In this study, we developed an electrochemical sensor for sensitive detection of Cu2+ based on gold nanoflowers (AuNFs)‐modified electrode and DNAzyme functionalized Au@MIL‐101(Fe) (MIL: Materials of Institute Lavoisier). The AuNFs‐modified indium tin oxide modified conductive glass electrode(AuNFs/ITO) prepared via electrodeposition showed improved electronic transport properties and provided more active sites to adsorb large amounts of oligonucleotide substrate (DNA1) via thiol‐gold bonds. The stable Au@MIL‐101(Fe) could guarantee the sensitivity because of its intrinsic peroxidase mimic property, while the Cu2+‐dependent DNA‐cleaving DNAzyme linked to Au@MIL‐101(Fe) achieved the selectivity toward Cu2+. After the DNAzyme substrate strand (DNA2) was cleaved into two parts due to the presence of Cu2+, the oligonucleotide fragment linked to MIL‐101(Fe) was able to hybridize with DNA1 adsorbed onto the surface of AuNFs/ITO. Due to the peroxidase‐like catalytic activity of MIL‐101(Fe) and the affinity recognition property of DNAzyme toward Cu2+, the electrochemical biosensor showed a sensitive detection range from 0.001 to 100 μM, a detection limit of 0.457 nM and a high selectivity, demonstrating its potential for Cu2+ detection in real environmental samples. |