A nitroreductase-activatable metabolic reporter for covalent labeling of pathological hypoxic cells in tumorigenesis

Aberrant hypoxic stress will initiate a cascade of pathological consequence observed prominently in tumorigenesis. Understanding of hypoxia's role in tumorigenesis is highly essential for developing effective therapeutics, which necessitates reliable tools to specifically distinguish hypoxic tu...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Wang, Zhimin, Lau, Jun Wei, Liu, Songhan, Ren, Ziheng, Gong, Zhiyuan, Liu, Xiaogang, Xing, Bengang
Other Authors: School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2025
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/182206
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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Summary:Aberrant hypoxic stress will initiate a cascade of pathological consequence observed prominently in tumorigenesis. Understanding of hypoxia's role in tumorigenesis is highly essential for developing effective therapeutics, which necessitates reliable tools to specifically distinguish hypoxic tumor cells (or tissues) and correlate their dynamics with the status of disease in complex living settings for precise theranostics. So far, disparate hypoxia-responsive probe molecules and prodrugs were designed via chemical or enzymatic reactions, yet their capability in real-time reporting pathogenesis development is often compromised due to unrestricted diffusion and less selectivity towards the environmental responsiveness. Herein we present an oxygen-insensitive nitroreductase (NTR)-activatable glycan metabolic reporter (pNB-ManNAz) capable of covalently labeling hypoxic tumor cells and tissues. Under pathophysiological hypoxic environments, the caged non-metabolizable precursor pNB-ManNAz exhibited unique responsiveness to cellular NTR, culminating in structural self-immolation and the resultant ManNAz could incorporate onto cell surface glycoproteins, thereby facilitating fluorescence labeling via bioorthogonal chemistry. This NTR-responsive metabolic reporter demonstrated broad applicability for multicellular hypoxia labeling, particularly in the dynamic monitoring of orthotopic tumorigenesis and targeted tumor phototherapy in vivo. We anticipate that this approach holds promise for investigating hypoxia-related pathological progression, offering valuable insights for accurate diagnosis and treatment.