Ultrasensitive detection of proteins and sugars at single-cell level

Commun Integr Biol. 2016 Jan 6;9(1):e1124201. doi: 10.1080/19420889.2015.1124201. eCollection 2016 Jan-Feb.

Abstract

Each cell produces its own responses even if it appears identical to other cells. To analyze these individual cell characteristics, we need to measure trace amounts of molecules in a single cell. Nucleic acids in a single cell can be easily amplified by polymerase chain reaction, but single-cell measurement of proteins and sugars will require de novo techniques. In the present study, we outline the techniques we have developed toward this end. For proteins, our ultrasensitive enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) coupled with thionicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide cycling can detect proteins at subattomoles per assay. For sugars, fluorescence correlation spectroscopy coupled with glucose oxidase-catalyzed reaction allows us to measure glucose at tens of nM. Our methods thus offer versatile techniques for single-cell-level analyses, and they are hoped to strongly promote single-cell biology as well as to develop noninvasive tests in clinical medicine.

Keywords: HIV-1 p24; adiponectin; fluorescence correlation spectroscopy; insulin; thio-NAD cycling.

Publication types

  • Review