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Multichannel DNA Sensor Array Fingerprints Cell States and Identifies Pharmacological Effectors of Catabolic Processes.

Authors :
Das Saha N
Sasmal R
Meethal SK
Vats S
Gopinathan PV
Jash O
Manjithaya R
Gagey-Eilstein N
Agasti SS
Source :
ACS sensors [ACS Sens] 2019 Dec 27; Vol. 4 (12), pp. 3124-3132. Date of Electronic Publication: 2019 Dec 10.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Cells at disease onset are often associated with subtle changes in the expression level of a single or few molecular components, making traditionally used biomarker-driven clinical diagnosis a challenging task. We demonstrate here the design of a DNA nanosensor array with multichannel output that identifies the normal or pathological state of a cell based on the alteration of its global proteomic signature. Fluorophore-encoded single-stranded DNA (ssDNA) strands were coupled via supramolecular interaction with a surface-functionalized gold nanoparticle quencher to generate this integrated sensor array. In this design, ssDNA sequences exhibit dual roles, where they provide differential affinities with the receptor gold nanoparticle as well as act as transducer elements. The unique interaction mode of the analyte molecules disrupts the noncovalent supramolecular complexation, generating simultaneous multichannel fluorescence output to enable signature-based analyte identification via a linear discriminant analysis-based machine learning algorithm. Different cell types, particularly normal and cancerous cells, were effectively distinguished using their fluorescent fingerprints. Additionally, this DNA sensor array displayed excellent sensitivity to identify cellular alterations associated with chemical modulation of catabolic processes. Importantly, pharmacological effectors, which could modulate autophagic flux, have been effectively distinguished by generating responses from their global protein signatures. Taken together, these studies demonstrate that our multichannel DNA nanosensor is well suited for rapid identification of subtle changes in a complex mixture and thus can be readily expanded for point-of-care clinical diagnosis, high-throughput drug screening, or predicting the therapeutic outcome from a limited sample volume.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2379-3694
Volume :
4
Issue :
12
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
ACS sensors
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
31763818
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acssensors.9b01009