Fluorescent visual quantitation of cell-secreted sialoglycoconjugates by chemoselective recognition and hybridization chain reaction†
Abstract
Sialic acid (SA), usually located at the termini of glycan chains, is one of the most important monosaccharide blocks for glycosylation of proteins. The expression level of sialoglycoconjugates (SiaGCs) in cellular secretome is of great significance in diagnosis of tumor malignancy. This work developed a fluorescent visual method for the detection of SiaGCs secreted from living cells by a boronic acid modified chip based chemoselective recognition and hybridization chain reaction. The cell-secreted SiaGCs, which were labeled with the azide group through a metabolic labeling technique during cell culture, were captured by the chip through chemoselective recognition of boronic acid toward SA. After further conjugating the azide group with an alkyne modified DNA probe, the captured SiaGCs could be conveniently endowed with the amplified fluorescent signal through a hybridization chain reaction of a pair of dye-labeled DNA hairpins, which led to a quantitative imaging method for detection of SiaGCs. The average amount of metabolically labeled SiaGCs secreted from a single HeLa cell and MCF-7 cell was 2.18 × 10−17 and 3.98 × 10−17 mol, respectively. The proposed method could be utilized to monitor the variation of the secreted SiaGCs during drug treatment, providing a useful tool for investigating the glycosylation and glycan-related biological processes.
- This article is part of the themed collections: Analyst Recent HOT articles and Celebrating 100 years of Chemistry at Nanjing University