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MMP-2-responsive fluorescent nanoprobes for enhanced selectivity of tumor cell uptake and imaging

Title
MMP-2-responsive fluorescent nanoprobes for enhanced selectivity of tumor cell uptake and imaging
Authors
Sun, LuXie, ShupingJi, XiuruZhang, JingmingWang, DongmeiLee, Seung JinLee, HyukjinHe, HuiningYang, Victor C.
Ewha Authors
이승진이혁진
SCOPUS Author ID
이승진scopus; 이혁진scopus
Issue Date
2018
Journal Title
BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE
ISSN
2047-4830JCR Link

2047-4849JCR Link
Citation
BIOMATERIALS SCIENCE vol. 6, no. 10, pp. 2619 - 2626
Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
It is difficult to develop highly selective substrate-based fluorescent nanoprobes for specific matrix metalloproteinases (MMPs) due to overlapping substrate specificities among the family of MMP enzymes. To resolve this issue, we have developed novel fluorescent nanoprobes that are highly selective for soluble MMP-2. Herein, MMP-2-responsive nanoprobes were prepared by immobilizing fluorescent fusion proteins on nickel ferrite nanoparticles via the His-tag nickel chelation mechanism. The fusion protein consisted of a fluorescent mCherry protein with a cell penetrating peptide (CPP) moiety. An MMP-2 cleavage site was also introduced within the fusion protein, which was directly linked to the nickel ferrite nanoparticles. The selectivity of nanoprobes was modulated by hiding the cleavage site of MMP-2 substrates deeply inside the system, which could result in strong steric hindrance between the nanoprobes and MMPs, especially for membrane-tethered MMPs such as MMP-14. A cell-based assay demonstrated that the nano-probes could only be activated by tumor cells secreting soluble MMP-2, but not membrane-tethered MMP-14. To further evaluate the contribution of the steric hindrance effect on the nanoprobes, a truncated recombinant MMP-14 was employed to confer their cleavage activity as compared to native membrane-tethered MMP-14. Furthermore, a designed probe with a diminished steric hindrance effect was proved to be activated by membrane-tethered type MMP-14. The results indicated that the design of fluorescent nanoprobes employing the steric hindrance effect can greatly enhance the selectivity of MMP-responsive nanoprobes realizing the specific detection of soluble MMP-2 in a tumor microenvironment. We believe that highly selective MMP-2-responsive fluorescent nanoprobes have broad impacts on biomedical applications including molecular imaging and labeling for tumor detection.
DOI
10.1039/c8bm00593a
Appears in Collections:
약학대학 > 약학과 > Journal papers
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