Fluidic Membrane Accelerating the Kinetics of Photoactivatable Hybridization Chain Reaction for Accurate Imaging of Tumor-Derived Exosomes.
Mengying YeShengqiang HuLiuyan ZhouXiaolan TangShu-Lin ZhaoJingjin ZhaoPublished in: Analytical chemistry (2022)
Slow intermolecular collisions and "always active" responses compromise the amplification efficiency and response accuracy of nonenzymatic hybridization chain reaction (HCR). In this study, a photoactivatable membrane-oriented HCR (MOHCR) system was rationally designed by binding a photocleavable initiator probe onto a target protein and then anchoring cholesterol-modified hairpin-structure fuel probes. When irradiated, the bound initiator probe was photoactivated and initiated self-assembly to generate activatable and amplified imaging. In a proof-of-concept assay, breast-cancer-derived exosomes were imaged based on the surface protein epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM). Photoactivatable responses provided precise spatiotemporal control of the MOHCR, and fluidic membranes enabled accelerated reaction kinetics. Our MOHCR system demonstrated high efficiency and accuracy in differentiating between plasma samples from breast cancer patients and healthy donors.
Keyphrases
- cell adhesion
- high efficiency
- high resolution
- nucleic acid
- living cells
- fluorescence imaging
- mesenchymal stem cells
- single molecule
- stem cells
- fluorescent probe
- binding protein
- protein protein
- quantum dots
- small molecule
- amino acid
- high throughput
- label free
- magnetic resonance imaging
- circulating tumor cells
- electron transfer
- computed tomography
- mass spectrometry
- transcription factor
- single cell
- kidney transplantation
- energy transfer