An ultrasound‐based platform is established to prepare homogenous arrays of giant unilamellar vesicles (GUVs) or red blood cell (RBCs), or hybrid assemblies of GUV/RBCs. Due to different responses to the modulation of the acoustic standing wave pressure field between the GUVs and RBCs, various types of protocell/natural cell hybrid assemblies are prepared with the ability to undergo reversible dynamic reconfigurations from vertical to horizontal alignments, or from 1D to 2D arrangements. A two‐step enzymatic cascade reaction between transmitter glucose oxidase‐containing GUVs and peroxidase‐active receiver RBCs is used to implement chemical signal transduction in the different hybrid micro‐arrays. Taken together, the obtained results suggest that the ultrasound‐based micro‐array technology can be used as an alternative platform to explore chemical communication pathways between protocells and natural cells, providing new opportunities for bottom‐up synthetic biology.
Prostate-specific membrane antigen (PSMA) is a prostate
cancer
target that plays a crucial role in prostate cancer diagnosis and
therapy. Herein, a novel dual-targeted imaging probe, [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-PSMA, was prepared by radiolabeling conjugated DOTA-FAPI-PSMA
with the short half-life radionuclide gallium-68 (68Ga),
which is dedicated to prostate cancer diagnostic imaging. In vitro,
[68Ga]Ga-FAPI-PSMA had higher affinity for the PSMA and
FAP high-expressing cell lines 22Rv1 and U87 MG with IC50 values of 4.73 and 2.10 nM, respectively, than in the corresponding
negative expression cell lines PC3 and A549, and significant
differences in cell uptake were also observed. In vivo, [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-PSMA was rapidly cleared from the body, and the estimated
radiation dose was relatively low compared with several other FAPI
probes. In 22Rv1 and U87 MG tumor xenografts, [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-PSMA
rapidly accumulated in tumors after administration, and the best images
can be obtained at 1 h postinjection. In conclusion, the dual-targeted
probe [68Ga]Ga-FAPI-PSMA was successfully prepared for
in vivo prostate cancer PET/CT imaging.
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