High-Fidelity Sensitive Tracing Circulating Tumor Cell Telomerase Activity

Dynamic tracing of intracellular telomerase activity plays a crucial role in cancer cell recognition and correspondingly in earlier cancer diagnosis and personalized precision therapy. However, due to the complexity of the required reaction system and insufficient loading of reaction components into...

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Veröffentlicht in:Analytical chemistry (Washington) 2024-04, Vol.96 (14), p.5527-5536
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Zining, Chen, Xiaohui, Qiu, Xiaopei, Chen, Yi, Wang, Tian, Lv, Linxi, Guo, Xinlin, Yang, Fei, Tang, Miao, Gu, Wei, Luo, Yang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Dynamic tracing of intracellular telomerase activity plays a crucial role in cancer cell recognition and correspondingly in earlier cancer diagnosis and personalized precision therapy. However, due to the complexity of the required reaction system and insufficient loading of reaction components into cells, achieving a high-fidelity determination of telomerase activity is still a challenge. Herein, an Aptamer-Liposome mediated Telomerase activated poly-Molecular beacon Arborescent Nanoassembly­(ALTMAN) approach was described for direct high-fidelity visualization of telomerase activity. Briefly, intracellular telomerase activates molecular beacons, causing their hairpin structures to unfold and produce fluorescent signals. Furthermore, multiple molecular beacons can self-assemble, forming arborescent nanostructures and leading to exponential amplification of fluorescent signals. Integrating the enzyme-free isothermal signal amplification successfully increased the sensitivity and reduced interference by leveraging the skillful design of the molecular beacon and the extension of the telomerase-activated TTAGGG repeat sequence. The proposed approach enabled ultrasensitive visualization of activated telomerase exclusively with a prominent detection limit of 2 cells·μL–1 and realized real-time imaging of telomerase activity in living cancer cells including blood samples from breast cancer patients and urine samples from bladder cancer patients. This approach opens an avenue for establishing a telomerase activity determination and in situ monitoring technique that can facilitate both telomerase fundamental biological studies and cancer diagnostics.
ISSN:0003-2700
1520-6882
1520-6882
DOI:10.1021/acs.analchem.3c05749