| Literature DB >> 28817270 |
Saira F Bakshi1, Nataliia Guz1, Andrey Zakharchenko2, Han Deng3, Alexei V Tumanov4, Craig D Woodworth3, Sergiy Minko2, Dmitry M Kolpashchikov5,6, Evgeny Katz1.
Abstract
Detection of specific mRNA in living cells has attracted significant attention in the past decade. Probes that can be easily delivered into cells and activated at the desired time can contribute to understanding translation, trafficking and degradation of mRNA. Here we report a new strategy termed magnetic field-activated binary deoxyribozyme (MaBiDZ) sensor that enables both efficient delivery and temporal control of mRNA sensing by magnetic field. MaBiDZ uses two species of magnetic beads conjugated with different components of a multicomponent deoxyribozyme (DZ) sensor. The DZ sensor is activated only in the presence of a specific target mRNA and when a magnetic field is applied. Here we demonstrate that MaBiDZ sensor can be internalized in live MCF-7 breast cancer cells and activated by a magnetic field to fluorescently report the presence of specific mRNA, which are cancer biomarkers.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28817270 PMCID: PMC5654739 DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b06022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Am Chem Soc ISSN: 0002-7863 Impact factor: 15.419
Scheme 1Principle of Magnetic Field-Activated Deoxyribozyme Sensor
(A) Binary deoxyribozyme sensor (BiDZ) as reported earlier.[18] DNA strands DZa and DZb hybridize to adjacent position of analyte and form deoxyribozyme catalytic core, which cleaves fluorogenic F-sub and increases sample fluorescence. (B) MaBiDZ developed in this study. Magnetic bead (MaB1)-bound DZa forms a catalytic core with DZb in the presence of analyte. The activated sensor produces signal only when: (i) second species of magnetic beads, MaB2 carrying F-sub is present and (ii) magnetic field that aggregates MaB1 and MaB2 is applied. See the DNA sequences in Table .
Oligonucleotides Used in the Study
| Name | Sequences |
|---|---|
| F-sub | 5′-CGGT ACA TTG TAG AAG TT AAG GTTFAM TCC TCg uCC CTG GGC A-BHQ1 |
| Twist | 5′-TAGT GGG ACG CGG ACA TGG ACC AGG CCC CCT CCA TCC TCC AGA CCG AGA AGG CGT AGC TGA GCC GCT CGT GAG CCA CAT AGC TGC A |
| DZa | 5′-NH2/AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAC GAG CGG CTC AGC TAC GCC T AC AAC CGA GAG AGG AAA C |
| DZb | 5′-CCA GGG A GG CTA GCT TCT CGG TCT GGA GGA TGG AG |
| Hook | 5′-NH2/AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AAA AA/iSp9/AAC TTC TAC AAT GTA CCG |
iSp9 - triethylene glycol linker; FAM attached to the DNA is a fluorescein derivative; BHQ1 - “Black Hole Quencher” is a fluorescence quencher; ribonucleotides are in low case.
Figure 1Comparison of in vitro fluorescent response of BiDZ and MaBiDZ sensor systems. (A) Time dependent response of BiDZ and MaBiDZ sensor: (a) without F-sub, (b) without synthetic Twist (see Table1) analyte, (c) response of MaBiDz without magnet applied, (d) response of BiDZ, and (e) MaBiDZ activated with magnetic field in the presence of 1 nM synthetic Twist analyte (see SI for concentrations of all other components of the BiDZ and MaBiDZ probe.) (B) Response of MaBiDZ (d, e, f) compared to BiDZ (a, b, c) in the presence of different concentrations of Twist analyte after 30 (a,d), 60 (b,e) or 120 (c,f) min. All error bars are the result of three independent measurements; some bars are not visible because they are smaller than the labels for the experimental points.
Figure 2Intracellular testing of MaBiDZ sensor. CLSM images of (A) Twist-overexpressing MCF-7 cancer cells treated with MaBiDZ sensor with magnetic field applied and (C) no magnetic field applied. Analogously treated cervical epithelial cells (expressing low levels of Twist) with (B) magnetic field applied and (D) without magnetic field. Images were taken after 2.5 h of incubation time. Nuclei are stained with Hoechst nuclear stain and visualized with 408 nm laser. Surfaces are stained with anti-epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) antibody and visualized with a 635 nm laser. Fluorescence from the MaBiDZ probe is visualized with the 488 nm laser. Corresponding flow cytometry data are shown as insets below each image. The gates on flow cytometry plots indicate percent of EpCAM positive cells with low and high MaBiDZ fluorescence. The number of internalized particles was estimated to be ca. 1 × 106 MaBiDZ per cell (see Figure SI11). Scale bar is 20 μm.