Protein detection in blood with single-molecule imaging

Author:

Mao Chih-Ping,Wang Shih-Chin,Su Yu-Pin,Tseng Ssu-Hsueh,He Liangmei,Wu Annie A.,Roden Richard B.S.,Xiao Jie,Hung Chien-Fu

Abstract

AbstractThe ability to identify and characterize individual biomarker protein molecules in patient blood samples could enable diagnosis of diseases at an earlier stage, when treatment is typically more effective. Single-molecule imaging offers a promising approach to accomplish this goal. However, thus far single-molecule imaging methods have only been used to monitor protein molecules in solutions or cell lysates, and have not been translated into the clinical arena. Furthermore, the detection limit of these methods has been confined to the picomolar (10−12 M) range. In many diseases, the circulating concentrations of biomarker proteins fall several orders of magnitude below this range. Here we describe Single-Molecule Augmented Capture (SMAC), a single-molecule imaging technique to visualize, quantify, and characterize individual protein molecules of interest down to the subfemtomolar (<10−15 M) range, even in complex biologic fluids. We demonstrate SMAC in a wide variety of applications with human blood samples, including the analysis of disease-associated secreted proteins, membrane proteins, and rare intracellular proteins. Using ovarian cancer as a model, a lethal malignancy in which high-grade disease is driven almost universally by alterations in the TP53 gene and frequently only diagnosed at a late, incurable stage, we found that mutant pattern p53 proteins are released into the blood in patients at an early stage in disease progression. SMAC opens the door to the application of single-molecule imaging in non-invasive disease profiling and allows for the analysis of circulating mutant proteins as a new class of highly specific disease biomarkers. The SMAC platform can be adapted to multiplex or high-throughput formats to characterize heterogeneous biochemical and structural features of circulating proteins-of-interest.One Sentence SummaryA single-molecule imaging approach detects individual disease-specific protein molecules, including mutant intracellular proteins, in blood samples.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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