4.8 Article

HSA-Lys-161 covalent bound fluorescent dye for in vivo blood drug dynamic imaging and tumor mapping

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages 218-224

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc05484h

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21907062, 22074084, 21878180]
  2. Scientific and Technological Innovation Programs of Higher Education Institutions in Shanxi [2019L0031]
  3. Shanxi Province 1331 project key innovation team construction plan cultivation team [2018-CT-1]
  4. 2018 Xiangyuan County Solid Waste Comprehensive Utilization Science and Technology Project [2018XYSDJS-05]
  5. Shanxi Collaborative Innovation Center of High Value-added Utilization of Coal-related Wastes [2015-10-B3]
  6. Key R&D Program of Shanxi Province [201903D421069]
  7. Shanxi Province Science Foundation [201901D111015]
  8. Key R&D and transformation plan of Qinghai Province [2020-GX-101]
  9. Scientific Instrument Center of Shanxi University [201512]
  10. Innovative Talents of Higher Education Institutions of Shanxi

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The specific combination of human serum albumin and fluorescent dye improved the performance of in vivo fluorescence labeling. A covalent binding site in human serum albumin was found to bind a fluorescent dye with a specific turn-on fluorescence signal, which could be enhanced by drugs like ibuprofen, warfarin and clopidogrel. The fluorescence intensity amplification in a drug concentration dependent manner allowed real-time blood drug concentration monitoring in mice, with potential applications in tumor marking and surgical resection.
The specific combination of human serum albumin and fluorescent dye will endow superior performance to a coupled fluorescent platform for in vivo fluorescence labeling. In this study, we found that lysine-161 in human serum albumin is a covalent binding site and could spontaneously bind a ketone skeleton quinoxaline-coumarin fluorescent dye with a specific turn-on fluorescence signal for the first time. Supported by the abundant drug binding domains in human serum albumin, drugs such as ibuprofen, warfarin and clopidogrel could interact with the fluorescent dye labeled human serum albumin to feature a substantial enhancement in fluorescence intensity (6.6-fold for ibuprofen, 4.5-fold for warfarin and 5-fold for clopidogrel). The drug concentration dependent fluorescence intensity amplification realized real-time, in situ blood drug concentration monitoring in mice, utilizing ibuprofen as a model drug. The non-invasive method avoided continuous blood sample collection, which fundamentally causes suffering and consumption of experimental animals in the study of pharmacokinetics. At the same time, the coupled fluorescent probe can be efficiently enriched in tumors in mice which could map a tumor with a high-contrast red fluorescence signal and could hold great potential in clinical tumor marking and surgical resection.

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