Profiling Plasma Cytokines by A CRISPR-ELISA Assay for Early Detection of Lung Cancer

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Abstract

Cytokines play crucial roles in tumorigenesis and are potential biomarkers for cancer diagnosis. An Enzyme-linked Immunosorbent Assay (ELISA) is commonly used to measure cytokines but has a low sensitivity and can only detect a single target at a time. CRISPR-Associated Proteins (Cas) can ultra-sensitively and specifically detect nucleic acids and is revolutionizing molecular diagnostics. Here, we design a microplate-based CRISPR-ELISA assay to simultaneously profile multiple cytokines, in which antibodies are coupled with ssDNA to form antibody-ssDNA complexes that bridges CRISPR/Cas12a and ELISA reactions. The ssDNA triggers the Cas12a collateral cleavage activity and releases the fluorescent reporters to generate amplified fluorescent signals in the ELISA detection of cytokines. The CRISPR-ELISA assay can simultaneously measure multiple cytokines with a significantly higher sensitivity compared with conventional ELISA. Using the CRISPR-ELISA assay to profile plasma cytokines in 127 lung cancer patients and 125 cancer-free smokers, we develop a panel of plasma cytokine biomarkers (IL-6, IL-8, and IL-10) for early detection of the disease, with 80.6% sensitivity and 82.0% specificity. The CRISPR-ELISA assay may provide a new approach to the discovery of cytokine biomarkers for early lung cancer detection.

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Li, N., Chinthalapally, M., Holden, V. K., Deepak, J., Dhilipkannah, P., Fan, J. M., … Jiang, F. (2022). Profiling Plasma Cytokines by A CRISPR-ELISA Assay for Early Detection of Lung Cancer. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 11(23). https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm11236923

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