Biomineralized Metal-Organic Framework Nanoparticles Enable Enzymatic Rolling Circle Amplification in Living Cells for Ultrasensitive MicroRNA Imaging.
Juan ZhangMengyun HeCunpeng NieManman HeQingshan PanChang LiuYanlei HuJintao YiTing-Ting ChenXia ChuPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2019)
The enzymatic amplification strategy in living cells faces challenges of highly efficient intracellular codelivery of amplification reagents including DNA polymerase. In this work, we develop biomineralized metal-organic framework nanoparticles (MOF NPs) as a carrier system for intracellular codelivery of ϕ29 DNA polymerase (ϕ29DP) and nucleic acid probes and realize a polymerization amplification reaction in living cells. A pH-sensitive biodegradable MOF NP of zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8) is utilized to encapsulate ϕ29DP and adsorb nucleic acid probes. After uptake into cells, the encapsulated ϕ29DP and surface-adsorbed DNA probes are released and escaped from endolysosomes. In the presence of ϕ29DP and deoxyribonucleotide triphosphates (dNTPs), the intracellular miRNA-21 triggers a rolling circle amplification (RCA) reaction and the autonomous synthesized Mg2+-dependent DNAzyme cleaves the fluorogenic substrate, providing a readout fluorescence signal for the monitoring of miRNA-21. This is the first example of the intracellular RCA reaction in living cells. Therefore, the proposed method provides new opportunities for achieving enzymatic amplification reaction in living cells.