4.6 Article

Dual-sensitive fluorescent nanoprobes for detection of matrix metalloproteinases and low pH in a 3D tumor microenvironment

Journal

JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY B
Volume 10, Issue 28, Pages 5388-5401

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d2tb00519k

Keywords

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Funding

  1. DBT [BT/PR26757/NNT/28/1429/2017]

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Dual-sensitive nanoprobes have been developed using carbon nanoparticles as pH sensing moieties and MMP-9 sensitive peptide sequences, enabling accurate detection and imaging of tumor environments. In vitro tests demonstrated successful visualization of low pH and high MMP-9 levels using these nanoprobes.
The overexpression of matrix metalloproteinases and low extracellular pH are two key physiological parameters involved in cancer initiation, progression, and metastasis. These have been the targets for several cancer detection and imaging modalities. Here, dual-sensitive nanoprobes have been fabricated from carbon nanoparticles decorated with a MMP-9 sensitive peptide sequence. Carbon nanoparticles are known for their intrinsic fluorescence properties and hence used as a pH-sensing moiety in the nanoprobes. In addition to this, selective-cleavage of the peptide sequence by MMP-9 results in the generation of a fluorescence signal due to separation of the quencher molecule from the fluorophore attached onto the MMP-9 sensitive peptide sequence, resulting in its detection. This protease-specific activation of the nanoprobes helps in precise tumor environment detection and imaging. The nanoprobes were thoroughly characterized for their chemical, physical and biological activities. The potential of these dual-sensitive nanoprobes to distinguish tumor-like microenvironments (low pH and elevated MMP-9 levels) from non-cancerous ones was evaluated in vitro in 2D cell culture as well as in 3D microscaffolds. The fluorescence microscopy images obtained in both in vitro systems revealed that low pH and high MMP-9 levels could be successfully visualised using these dual-sensitive nanoprobes. Therefore, these nanoprobes would find potential applications as a non-invasive imaging tool for visualising tumor margins in real-time.

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