4.8 Article

Multicolor Covalent Organic Framework-DNA Nanoprobe for Fluorescence Imaging of Biomarkers with Different Locations in Living Cells

Journal

ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 93, Issue 40, Pages 13734-13741

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.1c03545

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21927811, 21874086]
  2. Youth Innovation Science and Technology Program of Higher Education Institution of Shandong Province [2019KJC022]

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A tricolor fluorescent nanoprobe based on COF was developed for simultaneous imaging of biomarkers in living cells, enabling cancer cell-specific diagnostic imaging and monitoring of cancer cell exosomes infecting normal cells. This versatile nanoprobe offers new insights for developing novel COF-based nanoprobes.
Precisely detecting biomarkers in living systems holds tremendous promise for disease diagnosis and monitoring. Herein, we developed a covalent organic framework (COF)-based tricolor fluorescent nanoprobe for simultaneously imaging biomarkers with different spatial locations in living cells. Briefly, a TAMRA-labeled survivin mRNA antisense nucleotide and a Cy5-labeled transmembrane glycoprotein mucin 1 (MUC1) aptamer were adsorbed on a nanoscale fluorescent COF. To enhance the interactions between COF nanoparticles (NPs) and nucleic acid molecules, a freezing method was employed for improving the nucleic acid loading density and ensuring detection performance. The fluorescence signals of dyes on DNAs were first quenched by the COF NPs. Internalization and distribution of the nanoprobes can be real-time visualized by the autofluorescence of COF NPs. In living cells, recognition between MUC1 with MUC1 aptamers causes fluorescence signal recovery of Cy5, while hybridization between survivin mRNA and its antisense DNA induces the signal recovery of TAMRA. Therefore, this COF-based multicolor nanoprobe could be employed for visualizing MUC1 on the cell membrane and survivin mRNA in the cytoplasm. Cancer cell-specific diagnostic imaging and monitoring of the process of cancer cell exosomes infecting normal cells using the nanoprobe were achieved. This work not only offers a versatile nanoprobe for bioanalysis but also provides new insights for developing novel COF-based nanoprobes.

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