10 research outputs found

    Detection of Biomarkers in Blood Using Liquid Crystals Assisted with Aptamer-Target Recognition Triggered in Situ Rolling Circle Amplification on Magnetic Beads

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    Detection of biomarkers in body fluids is critical to both diagnosing the life-threatening diseases and optimizing therapeutic interventions. We herein report use of liquid crystals (LCs) to detect biomarkers in blood with high sensitivity and specificity by employing in situ rolling circle amplification (RCA) on magnetic beads (MBs). Specific recognition of cancer biomarkers, such as platelet derived growth factor BB (PDGF-BB) and adenosine, by aptamers leads to formation of a nucleic acid circle on MBs preassembled with ligation DNA, linear padlock DNA, and aptamers, thereby triggering in situ RCA. LCs change from dark to bright appearance after the in situ RCA products being transferred onto the LC interface decorated with octadecy trimethylammonium bromide (OTAB), which is particularly sensitive to the amplified DNA on MBs. Overall, this label-free approach takes advantages of high specificity of aptamer-based assay, efficient enrichment of signaling molecules on MBs, remarkable DNA elongation performance of the RCA reaction, and high sensitivity of LC-based assay. It successfully eliminates the matrix interference on the LC-based sensors and thus achieves at least 4 orders of magnitude improvement in sensitivity for detection of biomarkers compared to other LC-based sensors. In addition, performance of the developed sensor is comparable to that of the commercial ones. Thus, this study provides a simple, powerful, and promising approach to facilitate highly sensitive, specific, and label-free detection of biomarkers in body fluids

    Surface-Active Ionic-Liquid-Encapsulated Polyoxometalate Nanospheres: Construction, Self-Assembly, Adsorption Behavior, and Application for Dye Removal

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    The fabrication of materials that can efficiently adsorb environmental pollutants such as nonbiodegradable dyes is in urgent demand. In this work, the construction, characterization, and application of surface-active ionic-liquid-encapsulated polyoxometalates (SAILEPs) are reported. These hybrid materials with ordered structures are obtained in the aqueous phase by one-pot self-assembly at room temperature. They demonstrated a high capacity for the rapid adsorption of cationic dyes. The equilibrium time of rhodamine B (RhB) adsorption is only 1 min. These SAILEP materials also can selectively separate RhB from an eosin Y/RhB mixture. The fast and selective adsorption is attributed to electrostatic interactions and high affinities between SAILEPs and RhB. Meanwhile, investigation of the adsorption isotherms and kinetics indicates that the adsorption of dyes follows Langmuir isotherm models and pseudo-second-order kinetics. The self-assembly is investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering, Fourier transform infrared, and dynamic light scatttering. These studies offer further insight on the SAILEP hybrid materials, which have great potential in dye decontamination

    Ultrasensitive Point-of-Care Detection of Protein Markers Using an Aptamer-CRISPR/Cas12a-Regulated Liquid Crystal Sensor (ALICS)

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    Despite extensive efforts, point-of-care testing (POCT) of protein markers with high sensitivity and specificity and at a low cost remains challenging. In this work, we developed an aptamer-CRISPR/Cas12a-regulated liquid crystal sensor (ALICS), which achieved ultrasensitive protein detection using a smartphone-coupled portable device. Specifically, a DNA probe that contained an aptamer sequence for the protein target and an activation sequence for the Cas12a–crRNA complex was prefixed on a substrate and was released in the presence of target. The activation sequence of the DNA probe then bound to the Cas12a–crRNA complex to activate the collateral cleavage reaction, producing a bright-to-dark optical change in a DNA-functionalized liquid crystal interface. The optical image was captured by a smartphone for quantification of the target concentration. For the two model proteins, SARS-CoV-2 nucleocapsid protein (N protein) and carcino-embryonic antigen (CEA), ALICS achieved detection limits of 0.4 and 20 pg/mL, respectively, which are higher than the typical sensitivity of the SARS-CoV-2 test and the clinical CEA test. In the clinical sample tests, ALICS also exhibited superior performances compared to those of the commercial ELISA and lateral flow test kits. Overall, ALICS represents an ultrasensitive and cost-effective platform for POCT, showing a great potential for pathogen detection and disease monitoring under resource-limited conditions

    Multi-parameter Inputted Logic-Gating on Aptamer-Encoded Extracellular Vesicles for Colorectal Cancer Diagnosis

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    Extracellular vesicles (EVs) have emerged as a potential biomarker in liquid biopsy. However, cancer heterogeneity poses significant challenge to precise molecular diagnosis based on single-parameter input. Hence, strategies for analyzing multiple inputs with molecular computing were developed with the aim of improving diagnostic accuracy in liquid biopsy. In the present study, based on the surface of aptamer-encoded EVs, three toe-hold extended DNA aptamers served as specific inputs to perform AND-logic-gating to distinguish between healthy and cancerous EVs. In addition, this strategy has been successfully employed to analyze circulating EVs in clinical samples from colorectal cancer patients and healthy donors. The developed method has a promising future in the analysis of multiplex EV membrane proteins and the identification of early cancer

    Paper-Based Flow Sensor for the Detection of Hyaluronidase via an Enzyme Hydrolysis-Induced Viscosity Change in a Polymer Solution

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    Hyaluronidase (HAase) is implicated in inflammation, cancer development, and allergic reaction. The detection of HAase is significantly important in clinical diagnosis and medical treatment. Herein, we propose a new principle for the development of equipment-free and label-free paper-based flow sensors based on the enzymatic hydrolysis-induced viscosity change in a stimuli-responsive polymer solution, which increases the water flow distance on the pH indicator paper. The detection of HAase is demonstrated as an example. This facile and versatile method can overcome the potential drawbacks of traditional hydrogel-based sensors, including complex preparation steps, slow response time, or low sensitivity. Moreover, it can also avoid the use of specialized instruments, labeled molecules, or functionalized nanoparticles in the sensors developed using the polymer solutions. Using this strategy, the detection of HAase is achieved with a limit of detection as low as 0.2 U/mL. Also, it works well in human urine. Additionally, the detection of tannic acid, which is an inhibitor of HAase, is also fulfilled. Overall, a simple, efficient, high-throughput, and low-cost detection method is developed for the rapid and quantitative detection of HAase and its inhibitor without the use of labeled molecules, synthetic particles, and specialized instruments. As only minimal reagents of HAase, HA, and paper are used, it is very promising in the development of commercial kits for point-of-care testing

    Mitochondrial Protease Targeting Chimeras for Mitochondrial Matrix Protein Degradation

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    Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is an emerging technique for protein regulation. Currently, all TPD developed in eukaryotic cells relies on either ubiquitin-proteasome or lysosomal systems, thus are powerless against target proteins in membrane organelles lacking proteasomes and lysosomes, such as mitochondria. Here, we developed a mitochondrial protease targeting chimera (MtPTAC) to address this issue. MtPTAC is a bifunctional small molecule that can bind to mitochondrial caseinolytic protease P (ClpP) at one end and target protein at the other. Mechanistically, MtPTAC activates the hydrolase activity of ClpP while simultaneously bringing target proteins into proximity with ClpP. Taking mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) as a model protein, we have demonstrated the powerful proteolytic ability and antitumor application prospects of MtPTAC, both in vivo and in vitro. This is the first modularly designed TPD that can specifically hydrolyze target proteins inside mitochondria

    Mitochondrial Protease Targeting Chimeras for Mitochondrial Matrix Protein Degradation

    No full text
    Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is an emerging technique for protein regulation. Currently, all TPD developed in eukaryotic cells relies on either ubiquitin-proteasome or lysosomal systems, thus are powerless against target proteins in membrane organelles lacking proteasomes and lysosomes, such as mitochondria. Here, we developed a mitochondrial protease targeting chimera (MtPTAC) to address this issue. MtPTAC is a bifunctional small molecule that can bind to mitochondrial caseinolytic protease P (ClpP) at one end and target protein at the other. Mechanistically, MtPTAC activates the hydrolase activity of ClpP while simultaneously bringing target proteins into proximity with ClpP. Taking mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) as a model protein, we have demonstrated the powerful proteolytic ability and antitumor application prospects of MtPTAC, both in vivo and in vitro. This is the first modularly designed TPD that can specifically hydrolyze target proteins inside mitochondria

    Mitochondrial Protease Targeting Chimeras for Mitochondrial Matrix Protein Degradation

    No full text
    Targeted protein degradation (TPD) is an emerging technique for protein regulation. Currently, all TPD developed in eukaryotic cells relies on either ubiquitin-proteasome or lysosomal systems, thus are powerless against target proteins in membrane organelles lacking proteasomes and lysosomes, such as mitochondria. Here, we developed a mitochondrial protease targeting chimera (MtPTAC) to address this issue. MtPTAC is a bifunctional small molecule that can bind to mitochondrial caseinolytic protease P (ClpP) at one end and target protein at the other. Mechanistically, MtPTAC activates the hydrolase activity of ClpP while simultaneously bringing target proteins into proximity with ClpP. Taking mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) as a model protein, we have demonstrated the powerful proteolytic ability and antitumor application prospects of MtPTAC, both in vivo and in vitro. This is the first modularly designed TPD that can specifically hydrolyze target proteins inside mitochondria
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