Reliable Detection of Extracellular PD-L1 by DNA Computation-Mediated Microfluidics

Anal Chem. 2023 Jun 20;95(24):9373-9379. doi: 10.1021/acs.analchem.3c01686. Epub 2023 Jun 5.

Abstract

Extracellular vesicle PD-L1 (programmed death-1 ligand 1) is of greater value in tumor diagnosis, prognosis, and efficacy monitoring of anti-PD-1/PD-L1 immunotherapy. However, soluble PD-L1 interferes with the accurate detection of extracellular vesicle (EV) PD-L1. Here, we developed a microfluidic differentiation method for the detection of extracellular PD-L1, without the interference of soluble, by DNA computation with lipid probes and PD-L1 aptamer as inputs (DECLA). For the developed DECLA method, a cholesterol-DNA probe was designed that efficiently embeds into the EV membrane, and an aptamer-based PD-L1 probe was used for PD-L1 recognition. Due to the stable secondary structure of the designed connector, only cobinding of cholesterol-DNA and PD-L1 affinity probe induced biotin-labeled connector activation, while soluble PD-L1 cannot hybridize. As a result, PD-L1 EVs can be efficiently captured by streptavidin-functioned herringbone chip and quantified by anti-CD63-induced fluorescence signal. The high specificity of dual-input DNA computation allied to the high sensitivity of microfluidic-based detection was suitable for distinguishing lung cancer patients from healthy donors, highlighting its potential translation to clinical diagnosis and therapy monitoring.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • B7-H1 Antigen*
  • Computers, Molecular
  • Humans
  • Lung Neoplasms* / pathology
  • Microfluidics
  • Prognosis

Substances

  • B7-H1 Antigen