27 research outputs found
Biosensing Technologies for Mycobacterium tuberculosis Detection: Status and New Developments
Biosensing technologies promise to improve Mycobacterium tuberculosis (M. tuberculosis) detection and management in clinical diagnosis, food analysis, bioprocess, and environmental monitoring. A variety of portable, rapid, and sensitive biosensors with immediate “on-the-spot” interpretation have been developed for M. tuberculosis detection based on different biological elements recognition systems and basic signal transducer principles. Here, we present a synopsis of current developments of biosensing technologies for M. tuberculosis detection, which are classified on the basis of basic signal transducer principles, including piezoelectric quartz crystal biosensors, electrochemical biosensors, and magnetoelastic biosensors. Special attention is paid to the methods for improving the framework and analytical parameters of the biosensors, including sensitivity and analysis time as well as automation of analysis procedures. Challenges and perspectives of biosensing technologies development for M. tuberculosis detection are also discussed in the final part of this paper
A Light-Responsive Reversible Molecule-Gated System Using Thymine-Modified Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles
In this paper, a reversible light-responsive molecule-gated
system
based on mesoporous silica nanoparticles (MSN) functionalized with
thymine derivatives is designed and demonstrated. The closing/opening
protocol and release of the entrapped guest molecules is related by
a photodimerization–cleavage cycle of thymine upon different
irradiation. In the system, thymine derivatives with hydrophilicity
and biocompatibility were grafted on the pore outlets of MSN. The
irradiation with 365 nm wavelength UV light to thymine-functionalized
MSN led to the formation of cyclobutane dimer in the pore outlet,
subsequently resulting in blockage of pores and strongly inhibiting
the diffusion of guest molecules from pores. With 240 nm wavelength
UV light irradiation, the photocleavage of cyclobutane dimer opened
the pore and allowed the release of the entrapped guest molecules.
As a proof-of-the-concept, Ru(bipy)<sub>3</sub><sup>2+</sup> was selected
as the guest molecule. Then the light-responsive loading and release
of Ru(bipy)<sub>3</sub><sup>2+</sup> were investigated. The results
indicated that the system had an excellent loading amount (53 μmol
g<sup>–1</sup> MSN) and controlled release behavior (82% release
after irradiation for 24 h), and the light-responsive loading and
release procedure exhibited a good reversibility. Besides, the light-responsive
system loaded with Ru(bipy)<sub>3</sub><sup>2+</sup> molecule could
also be used as a light-switchable oxygen sensor
Regenerable Multifunctional Mesoporous Silica Nanocomposites for Simultaneous Detection and Removal of Mercury(II)
Mercury
(Hg<sup>2+</sup>) is a highly toxic and widespread environmental
pollutant. Herein, a regenerable and highly selective core–shell
structured magnetic mesoporous silica nanocomposite with functionalization
of thymine (T) and T-rich DNA (denoted as Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@nSiO<sub>2</sub>@mSiO<sub>2</sub>-T-TRDNA nanocomposite) has been
developed for simultaneous detection and removal of Hg<sup>2+</sup>. In this work, the thymine and T-rich DNA were immobilized onto
the interior and exterior surface of outermost mesoporous silica,
respectively. The detection mechanism is based on Hg<sup>2+</sup>-mediated
hairpin structure formed by T-rich DNA functionalized on the exterior
surface of the nanocomposites, where, upon addition of SYBR Green
I dye, strong fluorescence is observed. In the absence of Hg<sup>2+</sup>, however, addition of the dye results in low fluorescence. The limit
of detection for Hg<sup>2+</sup> in a buffer is 2 nM by fluorescence
spectroscopy. Simultaneously, the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@nSiO<sub>2</sub>@mSiO<sub>2</sub>-T-TRDNA nanocomposite features a selective
binding with Hg<sup>2+</sup> between two thymines immobilized at the
interior surface of the mesopores and exhibits efficient and convenient
Hg<sup>2+</sup> removal by a magnet. Kinetic study reveals that the
Hg<sup>2+</sup> removal is a rapid process with over 80% of Hg<sup>2+</sup> removed within approximately 1 h. The applicability of the
developed nanocomposites is demonstrated to detect and remove Hg<sup>2+</sup> from samples of Xiangjiang river water spiked with Hg<sup>2+</sup>. In addition, distinguishing aspects of the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@nSiO<sub>2</sub>@mSiO<sub>2</sub>-T-TRDNA nanocomposites
for Hg<sup>2+</sup> detection and removal also include the regeneration
using a simple acid treatment and resistance to nuclease digestion.
Similar process can be used to functionalize the Fe<sub>3</sub>O<sub>4</sub>@nSiO<sub>2</sub>@mSiO<sub>2</sub> nanocomposites with other
nucleic acids and small molecules for environmental and biomedical
applications
Label-Free Homogeneous Electrochemical Sensing Platform for Protein Kinase Assay Based on Carboxypeptidase Y‑Assisted Peptide Cleavage and Vertically Ordered Mesoporous Silica Films
Presented
herein is a simple, robust, and label-free homogeneous
electrochemical sensing platform constructed for the detection of
protein kinase activity and inhibition by integration of carboxypeptidase
Y (CPY)-assisted peptide cleavage reaction and vertically ordered
mesoporous silica films (MSFs). In this sensing platform, the substrate
peptide composed of kinase-specific recognized sequence and multiple
positively charged arginine (R) residues was ingeniously designed.
In the presence of protein kinase, the substrate peptide was phosphorylated
and then immediately resisted CPY cleavage. The phosphorylated peptide
could be effectively adsorbed on the negatively charged surface of
MSFs modified indium–tin oxide (ITO) electrode (MSFs/ITO) by
noncovalent electrostatic attraction. The adsorbed peptide was subsequently
used as a hamper to prevent the diffusion of electroactive probe (FcMeOH)
to the electrode surface through the vertically aligned nanopores,
resulting in a detectable reduction of electrochemical signal. As
demonstrated for the feasibility and universality of the sensing platform,
both protein kinase A (PKA) and casein kinase II (CK2) were selected
as the models, and the detection limits were determined to be 0.083
and 0.095 UmL<sup>–1</sup>, respectively. This sensing platform
had the merits of simplicity, easy manipulation, and improved phosphorylation
and cleavage efficiency, which benefited from homogeneous solution
reactions without sophisticated modification or immobilization procedures.
In addition, given the key role of inhibition and protein kinase activity
detection in cell lysates, this proposed sensing platform showed great
potential in kinase-related bioanalysis and clinical biomedicine
Poly(thymine)-Templated Copper Nanoparticles as a Fluorescent Indicator for Hydrogen Peroxide and Oxidase-Based Biosensing
Biomineralized fluorescent metal
nanoparticles have attracted considerable
interest in many fields by virtue of their excellent properties in
synthesis and application. Poly(thymine)-templated fluorescent copper
nanoparticles (T-CuNPs) as a promising nanomaterial has been exploited
by us recently and displays great potential for signal transducing
in biochemical analysis. However, the application of T-CuNPs is rare
and still at an early stage. Here, a new fluorescent analytical strategy
has been developed for H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> and oxidase-based
biosensing by exploiting T-CuNPs as an effective signal indicator.
The mechanism is mainly based on the poly(thymine) length-dependent
formation of T-CuNPs and the probe’s oxidative cleavage. In this assay, the probe
T40 can effectively template the formation of T-CuNPs by a fast <i>in situ</i> manner in the absence of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, with high fluorescent signal, while the probe is cleaved into short-oligonucleotide
fragments by hydroxyl radical (·OH) which is formed from the
Fenton reaction in the presence of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub>, leading
to the decline of fluorescence intensity. By taking advantage of H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> as a mediator, this strategy is further exploited
for oxidase-based biosensing. As the proof-of-concept, glucose in
human serum has been chosen as the model system and has been detected,
and its practical applicability has been investigated by assay of
real clinical blood samples. Results demonstrate that the proposed
strategy has not only good detection capability but also eminent detection
performance, such as simplicity and low-cost, holding great potential
for constructing effective sensors for biochemical and clinical applications
DNA-Functionalized Hollow Mesoporous Silica Nanoparticles with Dual Cargo Loading for Near-Infrared-Responsive Synergistic Chemo-Photothermal Treatment of Cancer Cells
Low
drug loading, premature drug leakage, and intratumoral genetic
heterogeneity are three main challenges that hinder the successful
nanotherapeutics-based oncotherapy, as they provide insufficient therapeutic
efficacy, systematic adverse effects, and multidrug resistance, respectively.
To address these challenges, we herein develop near-infrared (NIR)
laser-sensitive DNA-modified hollow mesoporous silica nanoparticles
(HMSNs) with dual cargo loading for chemo-photothermal combined treatment
of tumors. Starting from the zeolitic imidazolate framework-8 (ZIF-8)
template, a layer of mesoporous silica is coated on ZIF-8 (ZIF-8@MSNs),
and subsequently the template is self-degraded under acidic conditions
to obtain HMSNs. It is demonstrated that the as-made HMSNs possesses
a well-defined morphology, large hollow cavities, and abundant mesoporous
structures. After loading of indocyanine green into HMSNs’
core (ICG@HMSNs), the DNA strands, which are composed by sequential
cytosine-guanine (CG) base pairs, are then grafted onto the ICG@HMSNs
(DNA-ICG@HMSNs) to provide loading sites for anticancer drug doxorubicin
(DOX). The as-prepared DOX-inserted DNA-ICG@HMSNs (DOX@DNA-ICG@HMSNs)
shows highly efficient transformation of light energy into thermal
energy. Additionally, the loading amount of ICG is determined to be
930 mg g<sup>–1</sup> SiO<sub>2</sub>, which is more than 30
times compared to that in MCM-41-type MSNs. <i>In vitro</i> experiments using HeLa cells demonstrate that this NIR-laser-responsive
drug delivery system (DDSs) enables triggerable cargo release, presumably
by heat-induced disruption of the modified DNA double strands. Most
importantly, <i>in vitro</i> evaluation and preliminary <i>in vivo</i> investigations independently verified that the combination
of triggered chemotherapy and NIR-laser-based hyperthermal therapy
results in a better therapeutic effect than individual monotherapies.
With these superior properties, we expect that these multifunctional
DDSs would promote the application of HMSNs in nanomedical applications
Highly Fe<sup>3+</sup>-Selective Fluorescent Nanoprobe Based on Ultrabright N/P Codoped Carbon Dots and Its Application in Biological Samples
Measuring the levels
of Fe<sup>3+</sup> in human body has attracted
considerable attention for health monitoring as it plays an essential
role in many physiological processes. In this work, we reported a
selective fluorescent nanoprobe for Fe<sup>3+</sup> detection in biological
samples based on ultrabright N/P codoped carbon dots. By employing
adenosine 5′-triphosphate (ATP) as the carbon, nitrogen, and
phosphorus source, the N/P codoped carbon dots could be simply prepared
through hydrothermal treatment. The obtained carbon dots exhibited
high quantum yields up to 43.2%, as well as excellent photostability,
low toxicity, and water solubility. Because of the Fe–O–P
bonds formed between Fe<sup>3+</sup> and the N/P codoped carbon dots,
this nanoprobe showed high selectivity toward Fe<sup>3+</sup> against
various potential interfering substances in the presence of EDTA.
The fluorescence quenching of as-fabricated carbon dots was observed
with the increasing Fe<sup>3+</sup> concentration, and the calibration
curve displayed a wide linear region over the range of 1–150
μM with a detection limit of 0.33 μM. The satisfactory
accuracy was further confirmed with the river samples and ferrous
sulfate tablets, respectively. With the above outstanding properties,
these N/P codoped carbon dots were successfully applied for direct
detection of Fe<sup>3+</sup> in biological samples including human
blood serum and living cells. As compared to the most reported carbon
dots-based Fe<sup>3+</sup> sensors, this nanoprobe showed high fluorescence,
good accuracy, and excellent selectivity, which presents the potential
practical application for diagnosis of Fe<sup>3+</sup> related disease
Synthesis of Hollow Mesoporous Silica Nanorods with Controllable Aspect Ratios for Intracellular Triggered Drug Release in Cancer Cells
Here, we have reported a straightforward
and effective synthetic strategy for synthesis of aspect-ratios-controllable
mesoporous silica nanorods with hollow structure (hMSR) and its application
for transcription factor (TF)-responsive drug delivery intracellular.
Templating by an acid-degradable nickel hydrazine nanorods (NHNT),
we have first synthesized the hollow dense silica nanorods and then
coated on a mesoporous silica layer. Subsequently, the dense silica
layer was removed by the surface-protected etching method and the
hollow structure of hMSR was finally formed. The aspect ratios of
the hMSR can be conveniently controlled by regulating the aspect ratios
of NHNT. Four different hMSR with aspect ratios of ca. 2.5, ca. 5.3,
ca. 8.1, and ca. 9.0 has been obtained. It was demonstrated that the
as-prepared hMSRs have good stability, high drug loading capacity,
and fast cell uptake capability, which makes them to a potential nanocarrier
for drug delivery. As the paradigm, hMSR with an aspect ratio of ca.
8.1 was then applied for TF-responsive intracellular anticancer drug
controlled release by using a Ag<sup>+</sup>-stabilized molecular
switch of triplex DNA (TDNA) as capping agents and probes for TFs
recognition. In the presence of TF, the pores of hMSR can be unlocked
by the TFs induced disassembly of TDNA, leading to the leakage of
DOX. The research in vitro displayed that this system has a TFs-triggered
DOX release, and the cytotoxicity in L02 normal cells was lower than
that of HeLa cells. We hope that this developed hMSR-based system
will promote the development of cancer therapy in related fields