ExoAPP: Exosome-Oriented, Aptamer Nanoprobe-Enabled Surface Proteins Profiling and Detection.
Dan JinFan YangYulin ZhangLi LiuYujuan ZhouFubing WangGuo-Jun ZhangPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2018)
Tumor exosomes that inherit molecular markers from their parent cells are emerging as cellular "surrogates" in cancer diagnostics. Molecular profiling and detection of exosomes offer a noninvasive access to the state of cancer progression, yet are still technically challenging. Here we report an exosome-oriented, aptamer nanoprobe-based profiling (ExoAPP) assay to phenotype surface proteins and quantify cancerous exosomes in a facile mix-and-detect format. Our ExoAPP interfaces graphene oxide (GO) with target-responsive aptamers to profile exosomal markers across five cell types by complementing with enzyme-assisted exosome recycling, revealing a heterogeneous pattern.This assay achieves a detection limit down to 1.6 × 105 particles/mL, lowered by several orders of magnitude over other homogeneous protocols. Such a sensitive ExoAPP assay allows for monitoring epithelial-mesenchymal transition through heterogeneous exosomes without involving cellular internalization that often occurs in GO-based cargo delivery. Using ExoAPP to analyze blood samples from prostate cancer patients, we find that target exosome can be identified by surface PSMA, suggesting their potential in clinical diagnosis.
Keyphrases
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- induced apoptosis
- mesenchymal stem cells
- label free
- single cell
- stem cells
- epithelial mesenchymal transition
- high throughput
- papillary thyroid
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- real time pcr
- gold nanoparticles
- prostate cancer
- squamous cell
- sensitive detection
- cell therapy
- computed tomography
- single molecule
- transforming growth factor
- childhood cancer
- cancer therapy
- young adults
- cell proliferation
- lymph node metastasis
- oxidative stress
- risk assessment
- climate change
- highly efficient