Label-free optical detection of calcium ion influx in cell-derived nanovesicles using a conical Au/PDMS biosensor

Ion channels, which are key to physiological regulation and drug discovery, control ion flux across membranes, and their dysregulation leads to various diseases. Ca monitoring is crucial for cellular signaling when performing Ca-based assays in ion channel research; these assays are widely utilized...

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Veröffentlicht in:Lab on a chip 2024-08, Vol.24 (17), p.4138-4146
Hauptverfasser: Kwak, Jisung, Kim, Woochul, Cho, Hyerim, Han, Jiyun, Sim, Sang Jun, Song, Hyun Gyu, Pak, Yusin, Song, Hyun Seok
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Ion channels, which are key to physiological regulation and drug discovery, control ion flux across membranes, and their dysregulation leads to various diseases. Ca monitoring is crucial for cellular signaling when performing Ca-based assays in ion channel research; these assays are widely utilized in both academic and pharmaceutical contexts for drug screening and pharmacological profiling. However, existing detection methods are limited by slow detection speeds, low throughput, complex processes, and low analyte viability. In this study, we developed a label-free optical biosensing method using a conical Au/polydimethylsiloxane platform tailored to detect Ca influx in A549-originated nanovesicles facilitated by the transient receptor potential ankyrin 1 (TRPA1) channel. Nanovesicles expressing cellular signaling components mimic TRPA1 signal transduction in cell membranes and improve analyte viability. The conical Au/polydimethylsiloxane sensor converted Ca influx events induced by specific agonist exposure into noticeable changes in relative transmittance under visible light. The optical transmittance change accompanying Ca influx resulted in an enhanced sensing response, high accuracy and reliability, and rapid detection (∼5 s) without immobilization or ligand treatments. In the underlying sensing mechanism, morphological variations in nanovesicles, which depend on Ca influx, induce a considerable light scattering change at an interface between the nanovesicle and Au, revealed by optical simulation. This study provides a foundation for developing biosensors based on light-matter interactions. These sensors are simple and cost-effective with superior performance and diverse functionality.
ISSN:1473-0197
1473-0189
1473-0189
DOI:10.1039/d4lc00421c