4.8 Article

Simultaneous Imaging of Dual microRNAs in Cancer Cells through Catalytic Hairpin Assembly on a DNA Tetrahedron

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 14, Issue 10, Pages 12059-12067

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsami.1c23227

Keywords

microRNA; DNA tetrahedron nanostructure; nucleolin aptamer; catalytic hairpin assembly; fluorescence resonance energy transfer

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [22134005, 21974109]
  2. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [XDJK2019TY003]
  3. Chongqing Talents Program for Outstanding Scientists [cstc2021ycjh-bgzxm0178]

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Simultaneous detection and imaging of two miRNAs was achieved using a DTN probe, showing great potential for improving detection accuracy.
Accurate detection and imaging of tumor-related microRNA (miRNA) in living cells hold great promise for early cancer diagnosis and prognosis. One of the challenges is to develop methods that enable the identification of multiple miRNAs simultaneously to further improve the detection accuracy. Herein, a simultaneous detection and imaging method of two miRNAs was established by using a programmable designed DNA tetrahedron nanostructure (DTN) probe that includes a nucleolin aptamer (AS1411), two miRNA capture strands, and two pairs of metastable catalytic hairpins at different vertexes. The DTN probe exhibited enhanced tumor cell recognition ability, excellent stability and biocompatibility, and fast miRNA recognition and reaction kinetics. It was found that the DTN probe could specifically enter tumor cells, in which the capture strand could hybridize with miRNAs and initiate the catalytic hairpin assembly (CHA) only when the overexpressed miR-21 and miR-155 existed simultaneously, resulting in a distinct fluorescence resonance energy transfer signal and demonstrating the feasibility of this method for tumor diagnosis.

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