A Bioengineered Cathepsin B-sensitive Gas Vesicle Nanosystem That Responds With Increased Gray-level Intensity of Ultrasound Biomicroscopic Images.

Ultrasound Med Biol

Biomedical Engineering Program, COPPE, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil; Post-Graduate Program in Surgical Sciences, Department of Surgery, School of Medicine, Federal University of Rio de Janeiro, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study focused on enhancing the interaction between modified gas vesicles (GVs) and the protease cathepsin B (CTSB) to analyze their ultrasound signals.
  • Researchers genetically engineered a protein (GvpC) to include a cleavage site for CTSB, expressed it in bacteria, and created modified GVs (GV*) for testing.
  • Results showed a significant increase in ultrasound signal intensity when the modified GVs interacted with CTSB, indicating that these GVs could serve as effective biosensors for detecting protease activity in tissues.

Article Abstract

Objective: This work aimed to promote the interaction of a modified gas vesicle (GV) with cathepsin B (CTSB) protease and analysed their backscattered signal by ultrasound (US).

Methods: We modified the sequence of the gene coding for GvpC to contain a CTSB cleavage and expressed the protein in an Escherichia coli recombinant system. The protein was purified and added to GVs preparations in which the original GvpC was removed (ΔGV), constituting the modified GV (GV*). Western blot testing was used to compare GVs with GvpC and engineered GvpC at starting (T0) and after 24 h (T24) reacting with CTSB. A 21 MHz US B-mode and non-linear contrast mode (5% total power) imaged US phantoms having samples of GVwt, ΔGV (stripped GV), GV* and CTSB + GV*. Also, a 21 MHz US B-mode imaged US phantoms having a tumour cell line extracellular fraction (TCEF) and the TCEF + GV* sample. A 100% total US power was applied to collapse the GV structure.

Results: On Western blotting, we detected a decrease in engineered GvpC levels 24 h after the incubation of GV* with CTSB, compared with the concentration at T0, suggesting that CTSB cleaved the engineered GvpC. Regions-of-interest over image of phantom cross-sections were determined and the B-mode image mean grey-level intensity resulted in a significant (p < 0.05) increase comparing CTSB + GV* with PBS (control), GVwt, ΔGV and GV*. Non-linear mode image grey-level intensity from CTSB + GV* increased by 11.79, 7.86 and 14.75 dB from samples containing GVwt, ΔGV and GV*, respectively. GV preparations incubated with TCEF and the TCEF + GV* sample showed an increase of 81% in signal compared with TCEF + GVwt.

Conclusion: The increased US backscattered signal intensity suggests GVs as a potential biosensor for protease activity, possibly aiding the detection of protease-rich tissue regions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ultrasmedbio.2024.09.015DOI Listing

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