Signal amplification by cyclic extension enables high-sensitivity single-cell mass cytometry

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Abstract

Mass cytometry uses metal-isotope-tagged antibodies to label targets of interest, which enables simultaneous measurements of ~50 proteins or protein modifications in millions of single cells, but its sensitivity is limited. Here, we present a signal amplification technology, termed Amplification by Cyclic Extension (ACE), implementing thermal-cycling-based DNA in situ concatenation in combination with 3-cyanovinylcarbazole phosphoramidite-based DNA crosslinking to enable signal amplification simultaneously on >30 protein epitopes. We demonstrate the utility of ACE in low-abundance protein quantification with suspension mass cytometry to characterize molecular reprogramming during the epithelial-to-mesenchymal transition as well as the mesenchymal-to-epithelial transition. We show the capability of ACE to quantify the dynamics of signaling network responses in human T lymphocytes. We further present the application of ACE in imaging mass cytometry-based multiparametric tissue imaging to identify tissue compartments and profile spatial aspects related to pathological states in polycystic kidney tissues.

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Lun, X. K., Sheng, K., Yu, X., Lam, C. Y., Gowri, G., Serrata, M., … Yin, P. (2024). Signal amplification by cyclic extension enables high-sensitivity single-cell mass cytometry. Nature Biotechnology. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41587-024-02316-x

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