ac3020643_si_001.pdf (1.3 MB)
An RNA Aptamer-Based Microcantilever Sensor To Detect the Inflammatory Marker, Mouse Lipocalin‑2
journal contribution
posted on 2012-10-16, 00:00 authored by Lijie Zhai, Tianjiao Wang, Kyungho Kang, Yue Zhao, Pranav Shrotriya, Marit Nilsen-HamiltonLipocalin-2 (Lcn2) is a biomarker for many inflammatory-based
diseases, including acute kidney injury, cardiovascular stress, diabetes,
and various cancers. Inflammatory transitions occur rapidly in kidney
and cardiovascular disease, for which an in-line monitor could be
beneficial. Microcantilever devices with aptamers as recognition elements
can be effective and rapidly responsive sensors. Here, we have selected
and characterized an RNA aptamer that specifically binds mouse Lcn2
(mLcn2) with a dissociation constant of 340
± 70 nM in solution and 38 ± 22 nM
when immobilized on a surface. The higher apparent affinity of the
immobilized aptamer may result from its effective multivalency that
decreases the off-rate. The aptamer competes with a catechol iron-siderophore,
the natural ligand of mLcn2. This and the results of studies with
mLcn2 mutants demonstrate that the aptamer binds to the siderophore
binding pocket of the protein. A differential interferometer-based
microcantilever sensor was developed with the aptamer as the recognition
element in which the differential response between two adjacent cantilevers
(a sensing/reference pair) is utilized to detect the binding between
mLcn2 and the aptamer, ensuring that sensor response is independent
of environmental influences, distance between sensing surface and
detector and nonspecific binding. The system showed a detection limit
of 4 nM. This novel microcantilever aptasensor has potential for development
as an in-line monitoring system for mLcn2 in studies of animal models
of acute diseases such as kidney and cardiac failure.