| Literature DB >> 26035455 |
Berta Esteban-Fernández de Ávila1, Aída Martín1,2, Fernando Soto1, Miguel Angel Lopez-Ramirez1, Susana Campuzano3, Gersson Manuel Vásquez-Machado, Weiwei Gao1, Liangfang Zhang1, Joseph Wang1.
Abstract
A nanomotor-based strategy for rapid single-step intracellular biosensing of a target miRNA, expressed in intact cancer cells, at the single cell level is described. The new concept relies on the use of ultrasound (US) propelled dye-labeled single-stranded DNA (ssDNA)/graphene-oxide (GO) coated gold nanowires (AuNWs) capable of penetrating intact cancer cells. Once the nanomotor is internalized into the cell, the quenched fluorescence signal (produced by the π-π interaction between GO and a dye-labeled ssDNA) is recovered due to the displacement of the dye-ssDNA probe from the motor GO-quenching surface upon binding with the target miRNA-21, leading to an attractive intracellular "OFF-ON" fluorescence switching. The faster internalization process of the US-powered nanomotors and their rapid movement into the cells increase the likelihood of probe-target contacts, leading to a highly efficient and rapid hybridization. The ability of the nanomotor-based method to screen cancer cells based on the endogenous content of the target miRNA has been demonstrated by measuring the fluorescence signal in two types of cancer cells (MCF-7 and HeLa) with significantly different miRNA-21 expression levels. This single-step, motor-based miRNAs sensing approach enables rapid "on the move" specific detection of the target miRNA-21, even in single cells with an extremely low endogenous miRNA-21 content, allowing precise and real-time monitoring of intracellular miRNA expression.Entities:
Keywords: graphene oxide; miRNAs; nanomotors; real-time biosensing; single intact cancer cells; ultrasound
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26035455 DOI: 10.1021/acsnano.5b02807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Nano ISSN: 1936-0851 Impact factor: 15.881