Issue 46, 2021

Intelligent demethylase-driven DNAzyme sensor for highly reliable metal-ion imaging in living cells

Abstract

The accurate intracellular imaging of metal ions requires an exquisite site-specific activation of metal-ion sensors, for which the pervasive epigenetic regulation strategy can serve as an ideal alternative thanks to its orthogonal control feature and endogenous cell/tissue-specific expression pattern. Herein, a simple yet versatile demethylation strategy was proposed for on-site repairing-to-activating the metal-ion-targeting DNAzyme and for achieving the accurate site-specific imaging of metal ions in live cells. This endogenous epigenetic demethylation-regulating DNAzyme system was prepared by modifying the DNAzyme with an m6A methylation group that incapacitates the DNAzyme probe, thus eliminating possible off-site signal leakage, while the cell-specific demethylase-mediated removal of methylation modification could efficiently restore the initial catalytic DNAzyme for sensing metal ions, thus allowing a high-contrast bioimaging in live cells. This epigenetic repair-to-activate DNAzyme strategy may facilitate the robust visualization of disease-specific biomarkers for in-depth exploration of their biological functions.

Graphical abstract: Intelligent demethylase-driven DNAzyme sensor for highly reliable metal-ion imaging in living cells

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
29 Sep 2021
Accepted
28 Oct 2021
First published
29 Oct 2021
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2021,12, 15339-15346

Intelligent demethylase-driven DNAzyme sensor for highly reliable metal-ion imaging in living cells

C. Hong, Q. Wang, Y. Chen, Y. Gao, J. Shang, X. Weng, X. Liu and F. Wang, Chem. Sci., 2021, 12, 15339 DOI: 10.1039/D1SC05370A

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