Ingestible Artificial Urinary Biomarker Probes for Urine Test of Gastrointestinal Cancer

Cheng Xu, Mengke Xu, Yuxuan Hu, Jing Liu, Penghui Cheng, Ziling Zeng, Kanyi Pu*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Although colorectal cancer diagnosed at an early stage shows high curability, methods simultaneously possessing point-of-care testing ability and high sensitivity are limited. Here, an orally deliverable biomarker-activatable probe (termed as HATS) for early detection of orthotopic tumors via remote urinalysis is presented. To enable its oral delivery to the colon, HATS is designed to have remarkable resistance to acidity and digestive enzymes in the stomach and small intestine and negligible intestinal absorption. Upon reaction with a cancer biomarker in the colon segment, HATS releases a small fragment of tetrazine that can transverse the intestinal barrier, enter blood circulation, and ultimately undergo renal clearance to urine. Subsequently, the urinary tetrazine fragment is detected by bioorthogonal reaction with trans-cyclooctene-caged resorufin (TCO-Reso) to afford a rapid and specific fluorescence enhancement of TCO-Reso. Such signal readout is correlated with the urinary tetrazine concentration and thus measures the level of cancer biomarkers in the colon. HATS-based optical urinalysis detects orthotopic colon tumors two weeks earlier than clinical serological tests and can be developed to a point-of-care paper test. Thereby, HATS-based urinalysis provides a non-invasive and sensitive approach to cancer screening at low-resource settings.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2314084
JournalAdvanced Materials
Volume36
Issue number25
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jun 20 2024
Externally publishedYes

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Wiley-VCH GmbH.

ASJC Scopus Subject Areas

  • General Materials Science
  • Mechanics of Materials
  • Mechanical Engineering

Keywords

  • bioorthogonal reaction
  • cancer detection
  • in vitro diagnosis
  • ingestible probe
  • urinalysis

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