Sucrose-Powered Liposome Nanosensors for Urinary Glucometer-Based Monitoring of Cancer.
Dongtao ZhouZhibin ZhangLiqing PanYanyi WangJingjing YangYanfeng GaoYujun SongPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2024)
Timely detection of early-stage cancer holds immense potential in enhancing prognostic outcomes. There is an increasing desire for versatile tools to enable simple, sensitive, and cost-effective cancer detection. By exploiting the extraintestinal metabolic inertness and efficiency renal clearance of sucrose, we designed a liposome nanosensor using sucrose as a messenger to convert tumor-specific esterase activity into glucose meter readout, enabling economical and sensitive urinalysis for cancer detection in point-of-care testing (POCT). Our results demonstrate that the nanosensors exhibited significant signal differences between tumor-bearing and healthy mice in both orthotopic and metastatic tumor models. Additionally, efficient elimination of the nanosensors through the hepatobiliary pathway was observed with no significant toxicity. Such a non-invasive diagnostic modality significantly assists in personalized pharmacological treatment and follow-up efficacy assessment. We envision that this modular liposome nanosensor platform might be applied for economically detecting diverse diseases via a simple urinary test.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- early stage
- squamous cell
- squamous cell carcinoma
- small cell lung cancer
- lymph node metastasis
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- childhood cancer
- label free
- radiation therapy
- type diabetes
- high throughput
- real time pcr
- skeletal muscle
- neoadjuvant chemotherapy
- locally advanced
- rectal cancer
- glycemic control
- weight loss
- sensitive detection