Chemotaxis-Instructed Intracellular Staphylococcus aureus Infection Detection by a Targeting and Self-Assembly Signal-Enhanced Photoacoustic Probe.

Nano Lett

CAS Center for Excellence in Nanoscience, CAS Key Laboratory for Biomedical Effects of Nanomaterials and Nanosafety , National Center for Nanoscience and Technology (NCNST), No. 11 Beiyitiao, Zhongguancun , Beijing , 100190 , China.

Published: October 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • Staphylococcus aureus can survive inside phagocytic cells, complicating treatment and contributing to antibiotic resistance, making detection of infected cells crucial.
  • The study introduces a photoacoustic agent (MPC) that effectively targets and visualizes intracellular S. aureus in macrophages by enhancing signals through a dynamic mechanism involving molecular tailoring and self-assembly.
  • Results show that the photoacoustic signal from the MPC increases significantly in infected cells, suggesting its potential as a sensitive diagnostic tool for bacterial infections.

Article Abstract

Intracellular invasion and the survival of Staphylococcus aureus in phagocytic cells has been regarded as one of the mechanisms that leads to the treatment failure of S. aureus infection and potential antibiotic resistance. The detection of infected phagocytic cells plays an important role in guiding antibiotic treatment and in reducing drug resistance. The development of a sensitive and specific imaging probe to visualize the intracellular bacteria is quite challenging. In this work, we report a photoacoustic agent (MPC) that is able to detect intracellular S. aureus infection through a dynamic process, including (i) active targeting and internalization into macrophage cells, (ii) specific molecular tailoring by caspase-1 in infected macrophage cells, and (iii) enhancement of the photoacoustic (PA) signal owing to molecular self-assembly. The PA signal per area of the "stimuli-induced assembly" agent (MPC) increases more than 2-fold over that of the active targeting control agent (MPC). Finally, based on this approach, the average PA signal in the infected site is enhanced by approximately 2.6-fold over that of the control site. We envision that this PA contrast agent may provide a new approach for the selective and sensitive diagnosis of an intracellular bacterial infection.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.nanolett.8b02286DOI Listing

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