Issue 43, 2022

Promoter-regulated in vivo asymmetric self-assembly strategy to synthesize heterogeneous nanoparticles for signal amplification

Abstract

Signal amplification is commonly used to enhance the sensitivity of biological analysis. Here, we present a strategy involving in vivo asymmetric self-assembly combined with promoter strength regulation to synthesize heterogeneous nanoparticles for signal amplification. Two expression vectors were constructed by genetically inserting, respectively, signal and binding molecules into the hepatitis B core antigen protein (HBcAg) structure. Because of differential expression of the two recombinant proteins in the presence of a strong promoter (T7) and a weak promoter (Tac-1) and spontaneous asymmetric self-assembly in vivo, heterogeneous HBcAg nanoparticles (NPs) with a high ratio of signal-bearing to target-binding molecules were obtained. These nanoparticles contained a large number of green fluorescent proteins as signal molecules and a small number of B1 immunoglobulin-binding domains from protein G for antibody binding, thus enabling sensitive immunoassays. As a proof of concept, improved sensitivity for antibody detection was achieved using the heterogeneous nanoparticle conjugated with a secondary antibody molecule.

Graphical abstract: Promoter-regulated in vivo asymmetric self-assembly strategy to synthesize heterogeneous nanoparticles for signal amplification

Associated articles

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Aug 2022
Accepted
11 Oct 2022
First published
13 Oct 2022

Nanoscale, 2022,14, 16180-16184

Promoter-regulated in vivo asymmetric self-assembly strategy to synthesize heterogeneous nanoparticles for signal amplification

C. Chen, J. Zhou, D. Men and X. Zhang, Nanoscale, 2022, 14, 16180 DOI: 10.1039/D2NR04661J

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