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Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes

Point-of-care applications rely on biomedical sensors to enable rapid detection with high sensitivity and selectivity. Despite advances in sensor development, there are challenges in cancer diagnostics. Detection of biomarkers, cell receptors, circulating tumor cells, gene identification, and fluore...

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Autores principales: Kannan, Srinivas, Begoyan, Vagarshak V., Fedie, Joseph R., Xia, Shuai, Weseliński, Łukasz J., Tanasova, Marina, Rao, Smitha
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6022918/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29642606
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios8020039
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author Kannan, Srinivas
Begoyan, Vagarshak V.
Fedie, Joseph R.
Xia, Shuai
Weseliński, Łukasz J.
Tanasova, Marina
Rao, Smitha
author_facet Kannan, Srinivas
Begoyan, Vagarshak V.
Fedie, Joseph R.
Xia, Shuai
Weseliński, Łukasz J.
Tanasova, Marina
Rao, Smitha
author_sort Kannan, Srinivas
collection PubMed
description Point-of-care applications rely on biomedical sensors to enable rapid detection with high sensitivity and selectivity. Despite advances in sensor development, there are challenges in cancer diagnostics. Detection of biomarkers, cell receptors, circulating tumor cells, gene identification, and fluorescent tagging are time-consuming due to the sample preparation and response time involved. Here, we present a novel approach to target the enhanced metabolism in breast cancers for rapid detection using fluorescent imaging. Fluorescent analogs of fructose target the fructose-specific transporter GLUT5 in breast cancers and have limited to no response from normal cells. These analogs demonstrate a marked difference in adenocarcinoma and premalignant cells leading to a novel detection approach. The vastly different uptake kinetics of the analogs yields two unique signatures for each cell type. We used normal breast cells MCF10A, adenocarcinoma cells MCF7, and premalignant cells MCF10AneoT, with hepatocellular carcinoma cells HepG2 as the negative control. Our data indicated that MCF10AneoT and MCF7 cells had an observable difference in response to only one of the analogs. The response, observed as fluorescence intensity, leads to a two-point assessment of the cells in any sample. Since the treatment time is 10 min, there is potential for use in rapid on-site high-throughput diagnostics.
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spelling pubmed-60229182018-07-02 Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes Kannan, Srinivas Begoyan, Vagarshak V. Fedie, Joseph R. Xia, Shuai Weseliński, Łukasz J. Tanasova, Marina Rao, Smitha Biosensors (Basel) Article Point-of-care applications rely on biomedical sensors to enable rapid detection with high sensitivity and selectivity. Despite advances in sensor development, there are challenges in cancer diagnostics. Detection of biomarkers, cell receptors, circulating tumor cells, gene identification, and fluorescent tagging are time-consuming due to the sample preparation and response time involved. Here, we present a novel approach to target the enhanced metabolism in breast cancers for rapid detection using fluorescent imaging. Fluorescent analogs of fructose target the fructose-specific transporter GLUT5 in breast cancers and have limited to no response from normal cells. These analogs demonstrate a marked difference in adenocarcinoma and premalignant cells leading to a novel detection approach. The vastly different uptake kinetics of the analogs yields two unique signatures for each cell type. We used normal breast cells MCF10A, adenocarcinoma cells MCF7, and premalignant cells MCF10AneoT, with hepatocellular carcinoma cells HepG2 as the negative control. Our data indicated that MCF10AneoT and MCF7 cells had an observable difference in response to only one of the analogs. The response, observed as fluorescence intensity, leads to a two-point assessment of the cells in any sample. Since the treatment time is 10 min, there is potential for use in rapid on-site high-throughput diagnostics. MDPI 2018-04-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6022918/ /pubmed/29642606 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios8020039 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Kannan, Srinivas
Begoyan, Vagarshak V.
Fedie, Joseph R.
Xia, Shuai
Weseliński, Łukasz J.
Tanasova, Marina
Rao, Smitha
Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title_full Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title_fullStr Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title_full_unstemmed Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title_short Metabolism-Driven High-Throughput Cancer Identification with GLUT5-Specific Molecular Probes
title_sort metabolism-driven high-throughput cancer identification with glut5-specific molecular probes
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6022918/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29642606
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bios8020039
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