figshare
Browse
nn3c10717_si_001.pdf (1.56 MB)

Self-Assembled Hyperbranched Gold Nanoarrays Decode Serum United Urine Metabolic Fingerprints for Kidney Tumor Diagnosis

Download (1.56 MB)
journal contribution
posted on 2024-01-08, 19:12 authored by Yuning Wang, Xiaoyu Xu, Yuzheng Fang, Shouzhi Yang, Qirui Wang, Wanshan Liu, Juxiang Zhang, Dingyitai Liang, Wei Zhai, Kun Qian
Serum united urine metabolic analysis comprehensively reveals the disease status for kidney diseases in particular. Thus, the precise and convenient acquisition of metabolic molecular information from united biofluids is vitally important for clinical disease diagnosis and biomarker discovery. Laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (LDI-MS) presents various advantages in metabolic analysis; however, there remain challenges in ionization efficiency and MS signal reproducibility. Herein, we constructed a self-assembled hyperbranched black gold nanoarray (HyBrAuNA) assisted LDI-MS platform to profile serum united urine metabolic fingerprints (S-UMFs) for diagnosis of early stage renal cell carcinoma (RCC). The closely packed HyBrAuNA afforded strong electromagnetic field enhancement and high photothermal conversion efficacy, enabling effective ionization of low abundant metabolites for S-UMF collection. With a uniform nanoarray, the platform presented excellent reproducibility to ensure the accuracy of S-UMFs obtained in seconds. When it was combined with automated machine learning analysis of S-UMFs, early stage RCC patients were discriminated from the healthy controls with an area under the curve (AUC) > 0.99. Furthermore, we screened out a panel of 9 metabolites (4 from serum and 5 from urine) and related pathways toward early stage kidney tumor. In view of its high-throughput, fast analytical speed, and low sample consumption, our platform possesses potential in metabolic profiling of united biofluids for disease diagnosis and pathogenic mechanism exploration.

History