Affiliations 

  • 1 Department of Materials and London Centre for Nanotechnology , Imperial College London , Exhibition Road , London SW7 2AZ , U.K
  • 2 Innovation Center of NanoMedicine , 3 Chome-25-14, Tonomachi , Kawasaki 210-0821 , Japan
  • 3 Experimental Studies, National Heart & Lung Institute , Imperial College London , London SW3 6LY , U.K
Anal Chem, 2019 Sep 03;91(17):11098-11107.
PMID: 31310103 DOI: 10.1021/acs.analchem.9b01704

Abstract

There are no methods sensitive enough to detect enzymes within cells, without the use of analyte labeling. Here we show that it is possible to detect protein ion signals of three different H2S-synthesizing enzymes inside microglia after pretreatment with silver nanowires (AgNW) using time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectrometry (TOF-SIMS). Protein fragment ions, including the fragment of amino acid (C4H8N+ = 70 amu), fragments of the sulfur-producing cystathionine-containing enzymes, and the Ag+ ion signal could be detected without the use of any labels; the cells were mapped using the C4H8N+ amino acid fragment. Scanning electron microscopy imaging and energy-dispersive X-ray chemical analysis showed that the AgNWs were inside the same cells imaged by TOF-SIMS and transformed chemically into crystalline Ag2S within cells in which the sulfur-producing proteins were detected. The presence of these sulfur-producing cystathionine-containing enzymes within the cells was confirmed by Western blots and confocal microscopy images of fluorescently labeled antibodies against the sulfur-producing enzymes. Label-free TOF-SIMS is very promising for the label-free identification of H2S-contributing enzymes and their cellular localization in biological systems. The technique could in the future be used to identify which of these enzymes are most contributory.

* Title and MeSH Headings from MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine.