4 research outputs found

    Detection of YAP1 and AR-V7 mRNA for Prostate Cancer prognosis using an ISFET Lab-On-Chip platform

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    AbstractProstate cancer (PCa) is the second most common cause of male cancer-related death worldwide. The gold standard of treatment for advanced PCa is androgen deprivation therapy (ADT). However, eventual failure of ADT is common and leads to lethal metastatic castration resistant PCa (mCRPC). As such, the detection of relevant biomarkers in the blood for drug resistance in mCRPC patients could lead to personalized treatment options. mRNA detection is often limited by the low specificity of qPCR assays which are restricted to specialised laboratories. Here, we present a novel reversetranscription loop-mediated isothermal amplification (RT-LAMP) assay and have demonstrated its capability for sensitive detection of AR-V7 and YAP1 RNA (3×101 RNA copies per reaction). This work presents a foundation for the detection of circulating mRNA in PCa on a non-invasive Lab-on-chip (LoC) device for use at point-of-care. This technique was implemented onto a Lab-on-Chip platform integrating an array of chemical sensors (ion-sensitive field-effect transistors - ISFETs) for real-time detection of RNA. Detection of RNA presence was achieved through the translation of chemical signals into electrical readouts. Validation of this technique was conducted with rapid detection (&lt;15 min) of extracted RNA from prostate cancer cell lines 22Rv1s and DU145s.</jats:p

    Targeting of low ALK antigen density neuroblastoma using AND logic-gate engineered CAR-T cells

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    Background aims: The targeting of solid cancers with chimeric antigen receptor (CAR) T cells faces many technological hurdles, including selection of optimal target antigens. Promising pre-clinical and clinical data of CAR T-cell activity have emerged from targeting surface antigens such as GD2 and B7H3 in childhood cancer neuroblastoma. Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK) is expressed in a majority of neuroblastomas at low antigen density but is largely absent from healthy tissues. / Methods: To explore an alternate target antigen for neuroblastoma CAR T-cell therapy, the authors generated and screened a single-chain variable fragment library targeting ALK extracellular domain to make a panel of new anti-ALK CAR T-cell constructs. / Results: A lead novel CAR T-cell construct was capable of specific cytotoxicity against neuroblastoma cells expressing low levels of ALK, but with only weak cytokine and proliferative T-cell responses. To explore strategies for amplifying ALK CAR T cells, the authors generated a co-CAR approach in which T cells received signal 1 from a first-generation ALK construct and signal 2 from anti-B7H3 or GD2 chimeric co-stimulatory receptors. The co-CAR approach successfully demonstrated the ability to avoid targeting single-antigen-positive targets as a strategy for mitigating on-target off-tumor toxicity. / Conclusions: These data provide further proof of concept for ALK as a neuroblastoma CAR T-cell target

    Single-molecule amplification-free multiplexed detection of circulating microRNA cancer biomarkers from serum

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    miRNA profiling from patient blood can be used for cancer diagnosis. Here the authors present an electro-optical nanopore sensing platform which allows sensitive and specific miRNA detection directly in human serum and apply to monitoring of miR-141-3p and miR-375-3p in different stage of prostate cancer
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