PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

Visualization of sialidase activity in Mammalian tissues and cancer detection with a novel fluorescent sialidase substrate.

  • Akira Minami,
  • Tadamune Otsubo,
  • Daisuke Ieno,
  • Kiyoshi Ikeda,
  • Hiroaki Kanazawa,
  • Kosuke Shimizu,
  • Ko Ohata,
  • Tsunehiro Yokochi,
  • Yuuki Horii,
  • Hokuto Fukumoto,
  • Risa Taguchi,
  • Tadanobu Takahashi,
  • Naoto Oku,
  • Takashi Suzuki

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0081941
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 1
p. e81941

Abstract

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Sialidase removes sialic acid from sialoglycoconjugates and plays crucial roles in many physiological and pathological processes. Various human cancers express an abnormally high level of the plasma membrane-associated sialidase isoform.Visualization of sialidase activity in living mammalian tissues would be useful not only for understanding sialidase functions but also for cancer diagnosis. However, since enzyme activity of mammalian sialidase is remarkably weak compared with that of bacterial and viral sialidases, it has been difficult to detect sialidase activity in mammalian tissues. We synthesized a novel benzothiazolylphenol-based sialic acid derivative (BTP-Neu5Ac) as a fluorescent sialidase substrate. BTP-Neu5Ac can visualize sialidase activities sensitively and selectively in acute rat brain slices. Cancer cells implanted orthotopically in mouse colons and human colon cancers (stages T3-T4) were also clearly detected with BTP-Neu5Ac. The results suggest that BTP-Neu5Ac is useful for histochemical imaging of sialidase activities.