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1.
ACS Appl Bio Mater ; 4(5): 4361-4372, 2021 05 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35006848

ABSTRACT

Environment-sensitive molecular probes offer the potential for a comprehensive mapping of the complex cellular milieu. We present here a radically new strategy of multiplexing highly sensitive, spectrally tuned fluorescent dyes for sensing cellular microenvironment. To achieve this multicolor, ratiometric cellular imaging, we first developed a series of highly sensitive, tunable molecular rotors for mitochondrial imaging, with emission wavelengths spanning the visible spectrum. These fluorogenic merocyanine dyes are all sensitive to solvent viscosity despite distinctive photophysical features. Our results show that merocyanine dyes can show a rotor-like behavior despite significant changes to the conventional donor-acceptor or push-pull scaffolds, thereby revealing conserved features of rotor dye chemistry. Developing closely related but spectrally separated dyes that have distinct response functions allows us to do ″two-color, two-dye″ imaging of the mitochondrial microenvironment. Our results with multidye, combinatorial imaging provide a direct visualization of the intrinsic heterogeneity of the mitochondrial microenvironment. The overall mitochondrial microenvironment (including contributions from local membrane order) as reported through two-color fluorescence ″ratio″ changes of multiplexed rotor dyes shows dynamic heterogeneity with distinct spatiotemporal signatures that evolve over time and respond to chemical perturbations. Our results offer a powerful illustration of how multiplexed dye imaging allows the quantitative imaging of mitochondrial membrane order and cellular microenvironment.


Subject(s)
Benzopyrans/chemistry , Biocompatible Materials/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Indoles/chemistry , Mitochondria/chemistry , Optical Imaging , Animals , Cells, Cultured , Materials Testing , Mice , Molecular Structure , NIH 3T3 Cells , Particle Size
2.
Biochemistry ; 57(16): 2359-2372, 2018 04 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29637772

ABSTRACT

Gelsolin is an actin-severing protein that attains an open functional conformation in the presence of Ca2+ or low pH. Mutations (D187N/Y) in the second domain of gelsolin trigger the proteolytic pathway producing amyloidogenic fragments that form the pathological hallmark of gelsolin amyloidosis and lattice corneal dystrophy type 2 (LCD2). Here, we show that the D187N mutant gelsolin in a Ca2+ depleted, low pH-activated, open conformation could assemble into amyloidogenic oligomers without necessarily undergoing the specific proteolytic step. Although both wild-type (WT) and mutant proteins exhibit closely overlapping globular shapes at physiological conditions, the latter exhibits subjugated actin depolymerization, loss of thermodynamic stability, and folding cooperativity. Mutant gelsolin displayed aberrant conformational unwinding and formed structural conformers with high associative properties at low pH conditions. A SAXS intensity profile and Guinier analysis of these conformers showed the formation of unusual, higher order aggregates. Extended incubation at low pH resulted in the formation of thioflavin T and Congo red positive, ß-sheet rich aggregates with a fibrillar, amyloid-like morphology visible under electron and atomic force microscopy. Mass spectrometric analysis of disaggregated end-stage fibrils displayed peptide fragments encompassing the entire protein sequence, indicating the involvement of full length mutant gelsolin in fibril formation. Atomistic and REMD simulations indicated a larger increase in solvent accessibility and loss of fold architecture in mutant gelsolin at low pH as compared to WT gelsolin. Our findings support the existence of a secondary oligomerization-dependent aggregation pathway associated with gelsolin amyloidosis and can pave the way for better therapeutic strategies.


Subject(s)
Amyloidogenic Proteins/genetics , Gelsolin/genetics , Mutant Proteins/genetics , Protein Conformation , Amino Acid Sequence/genetics , Amyloid/chemistry , Amyloid/genetics , Amyloidogenic Proteins/chemistry , Gelsolin/chemistry , Humans , Microscopy, Atomic Force , Mutant Proteins/chemistry , Mutation , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Peptide Fragments/genetics , Protein Aggregation, Pathological/genetics , Protein Stability , Proteolysis , X-Ray Diffraction
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