4.8 Article

Sensitive and Selective Plasmon Ruler Nanosensors for Monitoring the Apoptotic Drug Response in Leukemia

Journal

ACS NANO
Volume 8, Issue 9, Pages 9199-9208

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/nn502959q

Keywords

caspase; gold nanoparticles; plasmon coupling; leukemia; single molecule

Funding

  1. Microbial Pathogenesis and Host Defense Training Grant [T32-GM64337]
  2. UCSF Quantitative Biosciences Consortium (QBC) Fellowship
  3. NIGMS-IMSD [R25-GM56847]
  4. Human Frontier Science Program Cross-disciplinary postdoc research fellowship
  5. NIH [T32 GM007175]
  6. UC Cancer Research Coordinating Committee (CRCC) Fellowship
  7. National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering
  8. National Institutes of Health [NIH 1R21EB015088, NIH R01CA128765]
  9. Biomedical Research Technology Program of the NIH National Center for Research Resources [NIH NCRR P41RR001614, NRCC RR014606]

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Caspases are proteases involved in cell death, where caspase-3 is the chief executioner that produces an irreversible cutting event in downstream protein substrates and whose activity is desired in the management of cancer. To determine such activity in clinically relevant samples with high signal-to-noise, plasmon rulers are ideal because they are sensitively affected by their interparticle separation without ambiguity from photobleaching or blinking effects. A plasmon ruler is a noble metal nanoparticle pair, tethered in close proximity to one another via a biomolecule, that acts through dipole-dipole interactions and results in the light scattering to increase exponentially. In contrast, a sharp decrease in intensity is observed when the pair is confronted by a large interparticle distance. To align the mechanism of protease activity with building a sensor that can report a binary signal in the presence or absence of caspase-3, we present a caspase-3 selective plasmon ruler (C3SPR) composed of a pair of Zn0.4Fe2.6O4@SiO2@Au core-shell nanoparticles connected by a caspase-3 deavage sequence. The dielectric core (Zn0.4Fe2.6O4@SiO2)-shell (Au) geometry provided a brighter scattering intensity versus solid Au nanoparticles, and the magnetic core additionally acted as a purification handle during the plasmon ruler assembly. By monitoring the decrease in light scattering intensity per plasmon ruler, we detected caspase-3 activity at single molecule resolution across a broad dynamic range. This was observed to be as low as 100 fM of recombinant material or 10 ng of total protein from cellular lysate. By thorough analyses of single molecule trajectories, we show caspase-3 activation in a drug-treated chronic myeloid leukemia (1(562) cancer system as early as 4 and 8 h with greater sensitivity (2- and 4-fold, respectively) than conventional reagents. This study provides future implications for monitoring caspase-3 as a biomarker and efficacy of drugs.

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