Homogeneous Insulin and C-Peptide Sensors for Rapid Assessment of Insulin and C-Peptide Secretion by the Islets

Author:

Heyduk Ewa1,Moxley Michael M.1,Salvatori Alison1,Corbett John A.2,Heyduk Tomasz1

Affiliation:

1. Edward A. Doisy Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, St. Louis University Medical School, St. Louis, Missouri;

2. Department of Medicine, Division of Endocrinology, Diabetes, and Metabolism, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, Alabama.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Glucose-stimulated islet insulin or C-peptide secretion experiments are a fundamental tool for studying and assessing islet function. The goal of this work was to develop Ab-based fluorescent homogenous sensors that would allow rapid, inexpensive, near-instantaneous determinations of insulin and C-peptide levels in biological samples. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS Our approach was to use molecular pincer design (Heyduk et al., Anal Chem 2008;80:5152–5159) in which a pair of antibodies recognizing nonoverlapping epitopes of the target are modified with short fluorochrome-labeled complementary oligonucleotides and are used to generate a fluorescence energy transfer (FRET) signal in the presence of insulin or C-peptide. RESULTS The sensors were capable of detecting insulin and C-peptide with high specificity and with picomolar concentration detection limits in times as short as 20 min. Insulin and C-peptide levels determined with the FRET sensors showed outstanding correlation with determinations performed under the same conditions with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Most importantly, the sensors were capable of rapid and accurate determinations of insulin and C-peptide secreted from human or rodent islets, verifying their applicability for rapid assessment of islet function. CONCLUSIONS The homogeneous, rapid, and uncomplicated nature of insulin and C-peptide FRET sensors allows rapid assessment of β-cell function and could enable point-of-care determinations of insulin and C-peptide.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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