| Literature DB >> 28393126 |
Jie Zhou1, Xuewen Du1, Cristina Berciu2, Hongjian He1, Junfeng Shi1, Daniela Nicastro3, Bing Xu1.
Abstract
Alkaline phosphatase (ALP), an ectoenzyme, plays important roles in biology. But there is no activity probes for imaging ALPs in live cell environment due to the diffusion and cytotoxicity of current probes. Here we report the profiling of the activities of ALPs on live cells by enzyme-instructed self-assembly (EISA) of a D-peptidic derivative that forms fluorescent, non-diffusive nanofibrils. Our study reveals the significantly higher activities of ALP on cancer cells than on stromal cells in their co-culture and shows an inherent and dynamic difference in ALP activities between drug sensitive and resistant cancer cells or between cancer cells with and without hormonal stimulation. Being complementary to genomic profiling of cells, EISA, as a reaction-diffusion controlled process, achieves high spatiotemporal resolution for profiling activities of ALPs of live cells at single cell level. The activity probes of ALP contribute to understanding the reversible phosphorylation/dephosphorylation in the extracellular domains that is an emerging frontier in biomedicine.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 28393126 PMCID: PMC5380920 DOI: 10.1016/j.chempr.2016.07.003
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Impact factor: 22.804