Analytica chimica acta | 2019

An amplification strategy using DNA-Peptide dendrimer probe and mass spectrometry for sensitive MicroRNA detection in breast cancer.

 
 
 
 

Abstract


MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are emerging as novel biomarkers for diagnosis and treatment of various cancers, including breast cancer. Because the value of biomarkers primarily depends on whether they are quantifiable, great effort has been taken to develop assays for sensitive and accurate quantification of miRNAs. However, most of current assays have high nonspecific amplification effect, which limits quantification accuracy. In this study, we circumvented copying of nucleic acid sequence and developed a signal amplification strategy based on a novel DNA-peptide dendrimer (DPD) probe coupled with mass spectrometry. The DPD probe RP8-MAP4-DNA contained three functional domains, including substrate peptides containing eight reporter peptides and tryptic cleavage sites, peptide dendrimer scaffold and DNA complementary to target miRNA. The probe was first hybridized with the target miRNA (i.e., miR-21) that was biotinylated and attached to streptavidin agarose in advance. After trypsin digestion, the reporter peptide was liberated and quantified using LC-MS/MS. The signal intensity was approximately 8 fold greater than that without signal amplification. Finally, the developed assay was applied for the quantitative analysis of miR-21 in 3 human breast cell lines and 102 matched pairs of breast tissue samples. The miR-21 expression in tissue was also evaluated depend on histopathological features, molecular subtypes and prognosis of breast cancer. The result demonstrated that combination of DPD probe and mass spectrometry is a promising strategy for quantification of miRNAs and illustration of their biomarker potential, especially those at low abundance.

Volume 1069
Pages \n 73-81\n
DOI 10.1016/J.ACA.2019.04.009
Language English
Journal Analytica chimica acta

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