Grant Details
Grant Number: |
5R21CA204560-03 Interpret this number |
Primary Investigator: |
Walter, Nils |
Organization: |
University Of Michigan At Ann Arbor |
Project Title: |
Single-Molecule Counting of Cancer Biomarker Mirnas in Human Biofluids |
Fiscal Year: |
2019 |
Abstract
ABSTRACT:
The ultimate vision of this proposal is to develop a technology platform for the rapid, robust single molecule
analysis of microRNA (miRNA) biomarkers in cancer research that quantifies a panel of up to two hundred
cancer-associated miRNAs in a patient sample in under 30 minutes. miRNAs are non-coding RNAs with
pervasive gene regulatory function in higher eukaryotes. Over 1,000 miRNA genes compose ~2% of the human
genome, more than all protein-coding genes combined. Although typically only 22 nucleotides (nt) in length,
miRNAs regulate essentially all cellular pathways relevant to human health and disease, including cancer. Once
released from cells through apoptosis or possibly as external signaling molecules, circulating, cell-free miRNAs
are more stable in blood than most other nucleic acids, rendering them of high interest as clinical cancer
biomarkers. The validation of blood-borne cell-free miRNA biomarkers as clinically useful has been hindered,
however, by difficulties due to inherent, both pre-analytic and analytic, day-to-day and lab-to-lab variations
associated with PCR assays as the state-of-the-art for miRNA biomarker detection. The resulting both false-
positive and false-negative miRNA associations present a major barrier to developing miRNAs as validated
clinical biomarkers. We recently invented a novel, innovative technology paradigm for the direct single-molecule
identification and counting of miRNAs in crude biofluids that overcomes any need for either miRNA amplification
or labeling, promising to overcome many of the current challenges. Our approach, termed Single-Molecule
Recognition through Equilibrium Poisson Sampling (SiMREPS), exploits the binding of a short (9- to 10-nt),
fluorescently labeled DNA reader probe to an unlabeled miRNA immobilized on a glass surface through a
specific, short LNA capture probe. Using total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy, both specific
binding to the immobilized target and non-specific surface binding are detected. However, the equilibrium
binding of the reader probe to the target is distinctive in its kinetic signature, or fingerprint, a feature we have
used to achieve ultrahigh-confidence discrimination against false positives. Through varying the probe length
we have fine-tuned specificity, including the >500-fold discrimination between single nucleotide polymorphisms.
As initial proof-of-principle, we have demonstrated the direct in situ quantification of spiked-in prostate cancer
biomarker hsa-miR-141 in blood serum, after only minimal pre-treatment of a sample. We now propose to further
develop SiMREPS as a platform technology, by pursuing the following two Specific Aims: (i) We will develop an
optimized pre-analytic sample prep that efficiently liberates endogenous miRNAs from their serum matrix for
direct SiMREPS detection, and benchmark the results against current PCR assays requiring miRNA extraction.
(ii) We will develop SiMREPS toward miniaturization and multiplexing on a lens-free microscope. This project
will lay the foundation for SiMREPS to have a transformative impact by breaking down the technology barriers
currently limiting the successful development and validation of blood-based miRNA biomarkers for the clinic.
Publications
None