Programmable DNAzyme Computing for Specific <i>In Vivo</i> Imaging: Intracellular Stimulus-Unlocked Target Sensing and Signal Amplification
Yanan Wu, Zhijun Li, Zhijun Li, Mingqing Shi, Kun Yuan, Hong‐Min Meng, Lingbo Qu, Zhaohui Li, Zhaohui Li
Abstract
Molecular probe that enables in vivo imaging is the cornerstone of accurate disease diagnosis, prognostic estimation, and therapies. Although several nucleic acid-based probes have been reported for tumor detection, it is still a challenge to develop programmable methodology for accurately identifying tumors in vivo. Herein, a reconfigurable DNA hybridization-based reaction was constructed to assemble DNAzyme computing that contains an intracellular miRNA-unlocked entropy-driven catalysis module and an endogenous metal ion-responsive DNAzyme module for specific in vivo imaging. By reasonable design, the programmable DNAzyme computing can not only successfully distinguish tumor cells from normal cells but also enable tumor imaging in living mice. Due to its excellent operation with high specificity and sensitivity, this design may be broadly applied in the biological study and personalized medicine.