Huaizhi Kang
Xiamen University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Huaizhi Kang.
Analytical Chemistry | 2008
Ronghua Yang; Zhiwen Tang; Jilin Yan; Huaizhi Kang; Youngmi Kim; Zhi Zhu; Weihong Tan
In this paper, we report the assembly of single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWNTs) and single-stranded DNA to develop a new class of fluorescent biosensors which are able to probe and recognize biomolecular interactions in a homogeneous format. This novel sensing platform consists of a structure formed by the interaction of SWNTs and dye-labeled DNA oligonucleotides such that the proximity of the nanotube to the dye effectively quenches the fluorescence in the absence of a target. Conversely, and very importantly, the competitive binding of a target DNA or protein with SWNTs for the oligonucleotide results in the restoration of fluorescence signal in increments relative to the fluorescence without a target. This signaling mechanism makes it possible to detect the target by fluorescence spectroscopy. In the present study, the schemes for such fluorescence changes were examined by fluorescence anisotropy and fluorescence intensity measurements for DNA hybridization and aptamer-protein interaction studies.
Angewandte Chemie | 2010
Zhi Zhu; Cuichen Wu; Haipeng Liu; Yuan Zou; Xiaoling Zhang; Huaizhi Kang; Chaoyong James Yang; Weihong Tan
US NIH ; China National Scientific Foundation of China [20805038, 20620130427]; National Basic Research Program of China [2007CB935603, 2010CB732402, 2009ZX10004-312]; ACS Division of Analytical Chemistry
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
Huang-Hao Yang; Haipeng Liu; Huaizhi Kang; Weihong Tan
In this communication, we report a simple, but highly adaptable, method of constructing selective target-responsive hydrogels using DNA aptamers. The simplicity of the design is accomplished by using linear polymer chains as the hydrogel backbone and a DNA aptamer as the cross-linker. In this design, competitive binding of target to the aptamer causes the decrease of cross-linking density and, hence, dissolution of the hydrogel. The adaptability of this strategy for therapeutic applications was demonstrated using two different types of targets, small molecules and proteins. Our results indicated that this molecular engineering provides a highly selective and controllable release system whereby efficient release of therapeutic agents can occur at specific environments in which the target biomarker is found.
ACS Nano | 2011
Huaizhi Kang; Anna Carolina Trondoli; Guizhi Zhu; Yan Chen; Ya Jen Chang; Haipeng Liu; Yu-Fen Huang; Xiaoling Zhang; Weihong Tan
A near-infrared light-responsive drug delivery platform based on Au-Ag nanorods (Au-Ag NRs) coated with DNA cross-linked polymeric shells was constructed. DNA complementarity has been applied to develop a polyacrylamide-based sol-gel transition system to encapsulate anticancer drugs into the gel scaffold. The Au-Ag NR-based nanogels can also be readily functionalized with targeting moieties, such as aptamers, for specific recognition of tumor cells. When exposed to NIR irradiation, the photothermal effect of the Au-Ag NRs leads to a rapid rise in the temperature of the surrounding gel, resulting in the fast release of the encapsulated payload with high controllability. In vitro study confirmed that aptamer-functionalized nanogels can be used as drug carriers for targeted drug delivery with remote control capability by NIR light with high spatial/temporal resolution.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2010
Haipeng Liu; Zhi Zhu; Huaizhi Kang; Yanrong Wu; Kwame Sefan; Weihong Tan
Functional nanomaterials based on molecular self-assembly hold great promise for applications in biomedicine and biotechnology. However, their efficacy could be a problem and can be improved by precisely controlling the size, structure, and functions. This would require a molecular engineering design capable of producing monodispersed functional materials characterized by beneficial changes in size, shape, and chemical structure. To address this challenge, we have designed and constructed a series of amphiphilic oligonucleotide molecules. In aqueous solutions, the amphiphilic oligonucleotide molecules, consisting of a hydrophilic oligonucleotide covalently linked to hydrophobic diacyllipid tails, spontaneously self-assemble into monodispersed, three-dimensional micellar nanostructures with a lipid core and a DNA corona. These hierarchical architectures are results of intermolecular hydrophobic interactions. Experimental testing further showed that these types of micelles have excellent thermal stability and their size can be fine-tuned by changing the length of the DNA sequence. Moreover, in the micelle system, the molecular recognition properties of DNA are intact, thus, our DNA micelles can hybridize with complimentary sequences while retaining their structural integrity. Importantly, when interacting with cell membranes, the highly charged DNA micelles are able to disintegrate themselves and insert into the cell membrane, completing the process of internalization by endocytosis. Interestingly, the fluorescence was found accumulated in confined regions of cytosole. Finally, we show that the kinetics of this internalization process is size-dependent. Therefore, cell permeability, combined with small sizes and natural nontoxicity are all excellent features that make our DNA-micelles highly suitable for a variety of applications in nanobiotechnology, cell biology, and drug delivery systems.
Nano Letters | 2009
Huaizhi Kang; Haipeng Liu; Joseph A. Phillips; Zehui Cao; Youngmi Kim; Yan Chen; Zunyi Yang; Jianwei Li; Weihong Tan
We report the design of a single-molecule nanomotor driven by photons. The nanomotor is a DNA hairpin-structured molecule incorporated with azobenzene moieties to facilitate reversible photocontrollable switching. Upon repeated UV-vis irradiation, this nanomotor displayed 40-50% open-close conversion efficiency. This type of nanomotor displays well-regulated responses and can be operated under mild conditions with no output of waste. In contrast to multiple-component DNA nanomachines, the intramolecular interaction in this single-molecule system offers unique concentration-independent motor functionality. Moreover, the hairpin structure of the motor backbone can significantly improve the efficiency of light-to-movement energy conversion. These results suggest that azobenzene-incorporated, hairpin-structured single-molecule DNA nanomotors have promising potential for applications which require highly efficient light-driven molecular motors.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009
Youngmi Kim; Joseph A. Phillips; Haipeng Liu; Huaizhi Kang; Weihong Tan
The ability to inhibit an enzyme in a specific tissue with high spatial resolution combined with a readily available antidote should find many biomedical applications. We have accomplished this by taking advantage of the cis–trans photoisomerization of azobenzene molecules. Specifically, we positioned azobenzene moieties within the DNA sequence complementary to a 15-base-long thrombin aptamer and then linked the azobenzene-modified cDNA to the aptamer by a polyethylene glycol (PEG) linker to make a unimolecular conjugate. During the photoisomerization of azobenzene by visible light, the inhibition of thrombin is disabled because the probe hybridizes with the cDNA in the trans-azobenzene conformation so that the aptamer cannot bind its target thrombin. However, when UV light is applied, melting of the hairpin structure (duplex) is induced via trans-to-cis conversion, thereby changing conformation of the aptamer and making the aptamer free to bind to and inhibit its target thrombin. By using standard clotting assays, we measured the IC200 of various probe designs in both states and concluded the feasibility of using photon energy to temporally and spatially regulate these enzymatic reactions. Thus, we can report the development of DNA probes in the form of photon-controllable (thrombin) inhibitors, termed PCIs, and we expect that this approach will be highly beneficial in future biomedical and pharmaceutical applications.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Yan Chen; Meghan B. O’Donoghue; Yu-Fen Huang; Huaizhi Kang; Joseph A. Phillips; Xiaolan Chen; M. Carmen Estévez; Chaoyong James Yang; Weihong Tan
Measuring distances at molecular length scales in living systems is a significant challenge. Methods like Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) have limitations due to short detection distances and strict orientations. Recently, surface energy transfer (SET) has been used in bulk solutions; however, it cannot be applied to living systems. Here, we have developed an SET nanoruler, using aptamer-gold nanoparticle conjugates with different diameters, to monitor the distance between binding sites of a receptor on living cells. The nanoruler can measure separation distances well beyond the detection limit of FRET. Thus, for the first time, we have developed an effective SET nanoruler for live cells with long distance, easy construction, fast detection, and low background. This is also the first time that the distance between the aptamer and antibody binding sites in the membrane protein PTK7 was measured accurately. The SET nanoruler represents the next leap forward to monitor structural components within living cell membranes.
Langmuir | 2011
Huaizhi Kang; Haipeng Liu; Xiaoling Zhang; Jilin Yan; Zhi Zhu; Lu Peng; Huang-Hao Yang; Youngmi Kim; Weihong Tan
We have developed a photoresponsive DNA-cross-linked hydrogel that can be photoregulated by two wavelengths with a reversible sol-gel conversion. This photoinduced conversion can be further utilized for precisely controllable encapsulation and release of multiple loads. Specifically, photosensitive azobenzene moieties are incorporated into DNA strands as cross-linkers, such that their hybridization to complementary DNAs (cDNAs) responds differently to different wavelengths of light. On the basis of the rheology variation of hydrogels, it is possible to utilize this material for storing and releasing molecules and nanoparticles. To prove the concept, three different materials--fluorescein, horseradish peroxidase, and gold nanoparticles--were encapsulated inside the gel at 450 nm and then released by photons at 350 nm. Further experiments were carried out to deliver the chemotherapy drug doxorubicin in a similar manner in vitro. Our results show a net release rate of 65% within 10 min, and the released drug maintained its therapeutic effect. This hydrogel system provides a promising platform for drug delivery in targeted therapy and in biotechnological applications.
Methods of Molecular Biology | 2010
M. Carmen Estévez; Yu-Fen Huang; Huaizhi Kang; Meghan B. O’Donoghue; Suwussa Bamrungsap; Jilin Yan; Xiaolan Chen; Weihong Tan
Aptamers are DNA or RNA oligonucleotide sequences that selectively bind to their target with high affinity and specificity. They are obtained using an iterative selection protocol called SELEX. Several small molecules and proteins have been used as targets. Recently, a variant of this methodology, known as cell-SELEX, has been developed for a new generation of aptamers, which are capable of recognizing whole living cells. We have used this methodology for the selection of aptamers, which show high affinity and specificity for several cancer cells. In this chapter, we describe (1) the process followed for the generation of aptamers capable of recognizing acute leukemia cells (CCRF-CEM cells) and (2) the method of enhancing the selectivity and sensitivity of these aptamers by conjugation with a dual-nanoparticle system, which combines magnetic nanoparticles (MNP) and fluorescent silica nanoparticles (FNP). Specifically, the selected aptamers, which showed dissociation constants in the nanomolar range, have been coupled to MNPs in order to selectively collect and enrich cells from complex matrices, including blood samples. The additional coupling of the aptamer to FNPs offers an excellent and highly sensitive method for detecting cancer cells. In order to prove the potential of this rapid and low-cost method for diagnostic purposes, confocal microscopy was used to confirm the specific collection and detection of target cells in concentrations as low as 250 cells. The final fluorescence of the cells labeled with the nanoparticles was quantified using a fluorescence microplate reader.