Abstract
The hydrogel “affinity trap” engineered here from peptides and nucleic acids into dynamic supramolecular structures offered the opportunity to measure physiological concentrations of tissue-specific microRNA expression and degradation, symptomatic for diseased cells and tissues. Hydrogel size-discriminating properties allowed to segregate microRNAs from complex biological media into a hydrogel matrix and entrap the target sequence via hybridisation with a hydrogel-immobilized “capture” probe, when it could be detected through fluorescence quenching. We demonstrated the size-selective permeability of the hydrogel, which provided the protective microenvironment for microRNAs and detection probes from cell biological interference and afforded selective self-assembly and detection of oncogenic microRNA-21 (miR-21) in the presence of cell extracts, otherwise detrimental for detection in a gel-free solution. We were also able to monitor degradation of unlabelled miR-21 by natural (RNase A and H) and synthetic (miR-21-RNase) ribonucleases and their synergistic actions, which could be potentially useful in therapeutic knockdown of pathogenic RNAs.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Biomacromolecules |
Early online date | 20 Jun 2025 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 20 Jun 2025 |
Keywords
- Self-assembly
- Hydrogel
- recognition
- nucleic acids
- peptides
- microRNA