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1.
J Cell Biol ; 222(8)2023 08 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37278763

The spatial resolution of fluorescence microscopy has recently been greatly enhanced. However, improvements in temporal resolution have been limited, despite their importance for examining living cells. Here, we developed an ultrafast camera system that enables the highest time resolutions in single fluorescent-molecule imaging to date, which were photon-limited by fluorophore photophysics: 33 and 100 µs with single-molecule localization precisions of 34 and 20 nm, respectively, for Cy3, the optimal fluorophore we identified. Using theoretical frameworks developed for the analysis of single-molecule trajectories in the plasma membrane (PM), this camera successfully detected fast hop diffusion of membrane molecules in the PM, previously detectable only in the apical PM using less preferable 40-nm gold probes, thus helping to elucidate the principles governing the PM organization and molecular dynamics. Furthermore, as described in the companion paper, this camera allows simultaneous data acquisitions for PALM/dSTORM at as fast as 1 kHz, with 29/19 nm localization precisions in the 640 × 640 pixel view-field.


Fluorescent Dyes , Nanotechnology , Cell Membrane , Diffusion , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Single Molecule Imaging , Cell Biology
2.
J Cell Biol ; 222(8)2023 08 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37278764

Using our newly developed ultrafast camera described in the companion paper, we reduced the data acquisition periods required for photoactivation/photoconversion localization microscopy (PALM, using mEos3.2) and direct stochastic reconstruction microscopy (dSTORM, using HMSiR) by a factor of ≈30 compared with standard methods, for much greater view-fields, with localization precisions of 29 and 19 nm, respectively, thus opening up previously inaccessible spatiotemporal scales to cell biology research. Simultaneous two-color PALM-dSTORM and PALM-ultrafast (10 kHz) single fluorescent-molecule imaging-tracking has been realized. They revealed the dynamic nanoorganization of the focal adhesion (FA), leading to the compartmentalized archipelago FA model, consisting of FA-protein islands with broad diversities in size (13-100 nm; mean island diameter ≈30 nm), protein copy numbers, compositions, and stoichiometries, which dot the partitioned fluid membrane (74-nm compartments in the FA vs. 109-nm compartments outside the FA). Integrins are recruited to these islands by hop diffusion. The FA-protein islands form loose ≈320 nm clusters and function as units for recruiting FA proteins.


Focal Adhesions , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Diffusion , Focal Adhesions/metabolism , Integrins/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging , Cell Biology
3.
Mol Biol Cell ; 34(5)2023 05 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37039596

Two very polarized views exist for understanding the cellular plasma membrane (PM). For some, it is the simple fluid described by the original Singer-Nicolson fluid mosaic model. For others, due to the presence of thousands of molecular species that extensively interact with each other, the PM forms various clusters and domains that are constantly changing and therefore, no simple rules exist that can explain the structure and molecular dynamics of the PM. In this article, we propose that viewing the PM from its two predominant components, cholesterol and actin filaments, provides an excellent and transparent perspective of PM organization, dynamics, and mechanisms for its functions. We focus on the actin-induced membrane compartmentalization and lipid raft domains coexisting in the PM and how they interact with each other to perform PM functions. This view provides an important update of the fluid mosaic model.


Actins , Singing , Actins/metabolism , Anniversaries and Special Events , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cholesterol/metabolism
4.
Protein Sci ; 31(10): e4425, 2022 10.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36173170

We challenged the stabilization of a G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) in the active state solely by multiple amino-acid mutations without the agonist binding. For many GPCRs, the free energy of the active state is higher than that of the inactive state. When the inactive state is stabilized through the lowering of its free energy, the apparent midpoint temperature of thermal denaturation Tm exhibits a significant increase. However, this is not always the case for the stabilization of the active state. We constructed a modified version of our methodology combining statistical thermodynamics and evolutionary molecular engineering, which was recently developed for the inactive state. First, several residues to be mutated are determined using our statistical-thermodynamics theory. Second, a gene (mutant) library is constructed using Escherichia coli cells to efficiently explore most of the mutational space. Third, for the mutant screening, the mutants prepared in accordance with the library are expressed in engineered Saccharomyces cerevisiae YB14 cells which can grow only when a GPCR mutant stabilized in the active state has signaling function. For the adenosine A2A receptor tested, the methodology enabled us to sort out two triple mutants and a double mutant. It was experimentally corroborated that all the mutants exhibit much higher binding affinity for G protein than the wild type. Analyses indicated that the mutations make the structural characteristics shift toward those of the active state. However, only slight increases in Tm resulted from the mutations, suggesting the unsuitability of Tm to the stability measure for the active state.


GTP-Binding Proteins , Receptor, Adenosine A2A , Mutation , Receptor, Adenosine A2A/chemistry , Receptor, Adenosine A2A/genetics , Thermodynamics
5.
J Extracell Vesicles ; 10(11): e12147, 2021 09.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34533283

During embryonic development, cells differentiate in a coordinated manner, aligning their fate decisions and differentiation stages with those of surrounding cells. However, little is known about the mechanisms that regulate this synchrony. Here we show that cells in close proximity synchronize their differentiation stages and cellular phenotypes with each other via extracellular vesicle (EV)-mediated cellular communication. We previously established a mouse embryonic stem cell (ESC) line harbouring an inducible constitutively active protein kinase A (CA-PKA) gene and found that the ESCs rapidly differentiated into mesoderm after PKA activation. In the present study, we performed a co-culture of Control-ESCs and PKA-ESCs, finding that both ESC types rapidly differentiated in synchrony even when PKA was activated only in PKA-ESCs, a phenomenon we named 'Phenotypic Synchrony of Cells (PSyC)'. We further demonstrated PSyC was mediated by EVs containing miR-132. PKA-ESC-derived EVs and miR-132-containing artificial nano-vesicles similarly enhanced mesoderm and cardiomyocyte differentiation in ESCs and ex vivo embryos, respectively. PSyC is a new form of cell-cell communication mediated by the EV regulation of neighbouring cells and could be broadly involved in tissue development and homeostasis.


Extracellular Vesicles/metabolism , Animals , Cell Differentiation , Female , Mice , Nanoparticles , Phenotype , Pregnancy
6.
J Cell Biol ; 219(12)2020 12 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33053147

Using single-molecule imaging with enhanced time resolutions down to 5 ms, we found that CD59 cluster rafts and GM1 cluster rafts were stably induced in the outer leaflet of the plasma membrane (PM), which triggered the activation of Lyn, H-Ras, and ERK and continually recruited Lyn and H-Ras right beneath them in the inner leaflet with dwell lifetimes <0.1 s. The detection was possible due to the enhanced time resolutions employed here. The recruitment depended on the PM cholesterol and saturated alkyl chains of Lyn and H-Ras, whereas it was blocked by the nonraftophilic transmembrane protein moiety and unsaturated alkyl chains linked to the inner-leaflet molecules. Because GM1 cluster rafts recruited Lyn and H-Ras as efficiently as CD59 cluster rafts, and because the protein moieties of Lyn and H-Ras were not required for the recruitment, we conclude that the transbilayer raft phases induced by the outer-leaflet stabilized rafts recruit lipid-anchored signaling molecules by lateral raft-lipid interactions and thus serve as a key signal transduction platform.


CD59 Antigens/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging , src-Family Kinases/metabolism , CD59 Antigens/genetics , G(M1) Ganglioside/genetics , HeLa Cells , Humans , Membrane Microdomains/genetics , Proto-Oncogene Proteins p21(ras)/genetics , src-Family Kinases/genetics
7.
ACS Chem Biol ; 15(9): 2577-2587, 2020 09 18.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32808756

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) transduce extracellular signals into cells by interacting with G proteins and arrestins. Emerging evidence suggests that GPCRs on the plasma membrane are in a dynamic equilibrium among monomers, dimers, and larger oligomers. Nevertheless, the role of the oligomer formation in the GPCR signal transduction remains unclear. Using multicolor single-molecule live-cell imaging, we show a dynamic interconversion between small and large oligomer states of a chemoattractant GPCR, Formyl Peptide Receptor 1 (FPR1), and its binding affinity with G protein. Full agonist stimulation increased a fraction of large FPR1 oligomers, which allowed for prolonged FPR1-G protein interaction. The G protein interaction with FPR1 was most stabilized at the full agonist-bound large FPR1 oligomers. Based on these results, we propose that G protein-mediated signal transduction may be regulated synergistically by the ligand-binding and FPR1 oligomerization. Cooperative signal control induced by receptor oligomerization is anticipated as a target for drug discovery.


Receptors, Formyl Peptide/metabolism , Signal Transduction/physiology , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , GTP-Binding Proteins/chemistry , GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Humans , Ligands , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Protein Binding , Protein Multimerization , Receptors, Formyl Peptide/chemistry , Single-Cell Analysis
8.
Traffic ; 21(1): 106-137, 2020 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31760668

Many plasma membrane (PM) functions depend on the cholesterol concentration in the PM in strikingly nonlinear, cooperative ways: fully functional in the presence of physiological cholesterol levels (35~45 mol%), and nonfunctional below 25 mol% cholesterol; namely, still in the presence of high concentrations of cholesterol. This suggests the involvement of cholesterol-based complexes/domains formed cooperatively. In this review, by examining the results obtained by using fluorescent lipid analogs and avoiding the trap of circular logic, often found in the raft literature, we point out the fundamental similarities of liquid-ordered (Lo)-phase domains in giant unilamellar vesicles, Lo-phase-like domains formed at lower temperatures in giant PM vesicles, and detergent-resistant membranes: these domains are formed by cooperative interactions of cholesterol, saturated acyl chains, and unsaturated acyl chains, in the presence of >25 mol% cholesterol. The literature contains evidence, indicating that the domains formed by the same basic cooperative molecular interactions exist and play essential roles in signal transduction in the PM. Therefore, as a working definition, we propose that raft domains in the PM are liquid-like molecular complexes/domains formed by cooperative interactions of cholesterol with saturated acyl chains as well as unsaturated acyl chains, due to saturated acyl chains' weak multiple accommodating interactions with cholesterol and cholesterol's low miscibility with unsaturated acyl chains and TM proteins. Molecules move within raft domains and exchange with those in the bulk PM. We provide a logically established collection of fluorescent lipid probes that preferentially partition into raft and non-raft domains, as defined here, in the PM.


Cholesterol , Membrane Microdomains , Cell Membrane , Lipids , Unilamellar Liposomes
9.
Nat Chem Biol ; 14(5): 497-506, 2018 05.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29610485

Single-fluorescent-molecule imaging tracking (SMT) is becoming an important tool to study living cells. However, photobleaching and photoblinking (hereafter referred to as photobleaching/photoblinking) of the probe molecules strongly hamper SMT studies of living cells, making it difficult to observe in vivo molecular events and to evaluate their lifetimes (e.g., off rates). The methods used to suppress photobleaching/photoblinking in vitro are difficult to apply to living cells because of their toxicities. Here using 13 organic fluorophores we found that, by combining low concentrations of dissolved oxygen with a reducing-plus-oxidizing system, photobleaching/photoblinking could be strongly suppressed with only minor effects on cells, which enabled SMT for as long as 12,000 frames (~7 min at video rate, as compared to the general 10-s-order durations) with ~22-nm single-molecule localization precisions. SMT of integrins revealed that they underwent temporary (<80-s) immobilizations within the focal adhesion region, which were responsible for the mechanical linkage of the actin cytoskeleton to the extracellular matrix.


Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Integrins/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Actin Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Animals , CHO Cells , Cell Adhesion , Cricetulus , Extracellular Matrix/metabolism , HeLa Cells , Humans , Integrin beta1/metabolism , Integrin beta3/metabolism , Mice , NIH 3T3 Cells , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxygen/chemistry , Photobleaching , Video Recording
10.
Methods Enzymol ; 598: 267-282, 2018.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29306438

Gangliosides have been implicated in a variety of physiological processes, particularly in the formation and function of raft domains in the plasma membrane. However, the scarcity of suitable fluorescent ganglioside analogs had long prevented us from determining exactly how gangliosides perform their functions in the live-cell plasma membrane. With the development of new fluorescent ganglioside analogs, as described by Komura et al. (2017), this barrier has been broken. We can now address the dynamic behaviors of gangliosides in the live-cell plasma membrane, using fluorescence microscopy, particularly by single-fluorescent molecule imaging and tracking. Single-molecule tracking of fluorescent GM1 and GM3 revealed that these molecules are transiently and dynamically recruited to monomers (monomer-associated rafts) and homodimer rafts of the raftophilic GPI-anchored protein CD59 in quiescent cells, with exponential residency times of 12 and 40ms, respectively, in a manner dependent on raft-lipid interactions. Upon CD59 stimulation, which induces CD59-cluster signaling rafts, the fluorescent GM1 and GM3 analogs were recruited to the signaling rafts, with a lifetime of 48ms. These results represent the first direct evidence that GPI-anchored receptors and gangliosides interact in a cholesterol-dependent manner. Furthermore, they show that gangliosides continually move in and out of rafts that contain CD59 in an extremely dynamic manner, with much higher frequency than expected previously. Such studies would not have been possible without fluorescent ganglioside probes, which exhibit native-like behavior and single-molecule tracking. In this chapter, we review the methods for single-molecule tracking of fluorescent ganglioside analogs and the results obtained by applying these methods.


Cell Membrane/metabolism , Intravital Microscopy/methods , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging/methods , Animals , CD59 Antigens/metabolism , CHO Cells , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cricetulus , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , G(M1) Ganglioside/antagonists & inhibitors , G(M1) Ganglioside/chemistry , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , G(M3) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , G(M3) Ganglioside/chemistry , G(M3) Ganglioside/metabolism , Intravital Microscopy/instrumentation , Membrane Microdomains/chemistry , Microscopy, Fluorescence/instrumentation , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Single Molecule Imaging/instrumentation
11.
Shock ; 50(1): 119-125, 2018 07.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28930913

Clostridium difficile infections (CDI) have recently increased worldwide. Some CDI progress to fulminant and recurrent CDI and are associated with high mortality and morbidity. CD produces toxins A and B, which cause intestinal mucosal damage, although toxin B exhibits greater cytotoxicity. Pepsin-treated lactoferrin (PLF) is the decomposed product of lactoferrin (LF), a multifunctional glycoprotein with anti-inflammatory properties. Here, we investigate the effects of LF and PLF in toxin B-stimulated rat intestinal epithelial (IEC-6) cells. Different toxin B concentrations were added to IEC-6 cells with or without LF or PLF. Mitochondrial function and cell cytotoxicity were assessed by measuring WST-1 and LDH levels, respectively. WST-1 levels were higher in IEC-6 cells treated with toxin B and LF or PLF than in the toxin B-only control (P < 0.05). Compared with the toxin B-only control, LDH levels significantly decreased after toxin B and LF or PLF addition (P < 0.05). Wound restitution measurement using microscopy demonstrated significantly greater levels of wound restitution in cells treated with toxin B and LF or PLF than in those treated with toxin B alone after 12 h (P < 0.001). Furthermore, changes in IEC-6 cell tight junctions (TJs) were evaluated by immunofluorescence microscopy and zonula occludens-1 (ZO-1) protein expression. When LF or PLF were added to IEC-6 cells, TJ structures were maintained, and ZO-1 and occludin expression was upregulated. Taken together, these results demonstrate that LF and PLF prevent the cytotoxicity of toxin B and might have the potential to control CDI.


Bacterial Proteins/toxicity , Bacterial Toxins/toxicity , Lactoferrin/metabolism , Lactoferrin/pharmacology , Pepsin A/metabolism , Animals , Cell Line , Feces/microbiology , Intestinal Mucosa/drug effects , Rats , Tight Junctions/drug effects , Tight Junctions/metabolism , Zonula Occludens-1 Protein/metabolism
12.
Cell Biochem Biophys ; 76(1-2): 29-37, 2018 Jun.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29116599

Whether class-A G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) exist and work as monomers or dimers has drawn extensive attention. A class-A GPCR dopamine D2 receptor (D2R) is involved in many physiological and pathological processes and diseases, indicating its critical role in proper functioning of neuronal circuits. In particular, D2R homodimers might play key roles in schizophrenia development and amphetamine-induced psychosis. Here, using single-molecule imaging, we directly tracked single D2R molecules in the plasma membrane at a physiological temperature of 37 °C, and unequivocally determined that D2R forms transient dimers with a lifetime of 68 ms in its resting state. Agonist addition prolonged the dimer lifetime by a factor of ~1.5, suggesting the possibility that transient dimers might be involved in signaling.


Receptors, Dopamine D2/metabolism , Animals , CHO Cells , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Diffusion , Dimerization , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Half-Life , Humans , Photobleaching , Receptors, Dopamine D2/agonists , Receptors, Dopamine D2/genetics
13.
PLoS One ; 12(11): e0188778, 2017.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29190677

Electron tomography of the plasma membrane (PM) identified several layers of cortical actin meshwork running parallel to the PM cytoplasmic surface throughout the PM. Here, cortical actin structures and dynamics were examined in living cells, using super-resolution microscopy, with (x,y)- and z-resolutions of ~140 and ~400 nm, respectively, and single-molecule imaging. The super-resolution microscopy identified sub-micron-sized actin clusters that appeared identical by both phalloidin post-fixation staining and Lifeact-mGFP expression followed by fixation, and therefore, these actin clusters were named "actin-pl-clusters". In live cells, the actin-pl-clusters visualized by Lifeact-mGFP linked two or more actin filaments in the fine actin meshwork, acting as a node of the meshwork, and dynamically moved on/along the meshwork in a myosin II-dependent manner. Their formation depended on the Arp2/3 activities, suggesting that the movements could involve both the myosin motor activity and actin polymerization-depolymerization. The actin-pl-clusters differ from the actin nodes/asters found previously after latrunculin treatments, since myosin II and filamin A were not colocalized with the actin-pl-clusters, and the actin-pl-clusters were much smaller than the previously reported nodes/asters. The Lifeact linked to a fluorescently-labeled transmembrane peptide from syntaxin4 (Lifeact-TM) expressed in the PM exhibited temporary immobilization in the PM regions on which actin-pl-clusters and stress fibers were projected, showing that ≥66% of actin-pl-clusters and 89% of stress fibers were located in close proximity (within 3.5 nm) to the PM cytoplasmic surface. Podosome-associated cytoplasmic proteins, Tks4, Tks5, cortactin, and N-WASP, were transiently recruited to actin-pl-clusters, and thus, we propose that actin-pl-clusters also represent "actin podosome-like clusters".


Actins/metabolism , Podosomes/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging/methods , Animals , Cells, Cultured
14.
Biochim Biophys Acta Gen Subj ; 1861(10): 2494-2506, 2017 Oct.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28734966

Gangliosides are involved in a variety of biological roles and are a component of lipid rafts found in cell plasma membranes (PMs). Gangliosides are especially abundant in neuronal PMs and are essential to their physiological functions. However, the dynamic behaviors of gangliosides have not been investigated in living cells due to a lack of fluorescent probes that behave like their parental molecules. We have recently developed, using an entirely chemical method, four new ganglioside probes (GM1, GM2, GM3, and GD1b) that act similarly to their parental molecules in terms of raft partitioning and binding affinity. Using single fluorescent-molecule imaging, we have found that ganglioside probes dynamically enter and leave rafts featuring CD59, a GPI-anchored protein. This occurs both before and after stimulation. The residency time of our ganglioside probes in rafts with CD59 oligomers was 48ms, after stimulation. The residency times in CD59 homodimer and monomer rafts were 40ms and 12ms, respectively. In this review, we introduce an entirely chemical-based ganglioside analog synthesis method and describe its application in single-molecule imaging and for the study of the dynamic behavior of gangliosides in cell PMs. Finally, we discuss how raft domains are formed, both before and after receptor engagement. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled Neuro-glycoscience, edited by Kenji Kadomatsu and Hiroshi Kitagawa.


G(M1) Ganglioside/chemical synthesis , G(M2) Ganglioside/chemical synthesis , G(M3) Ganglioside/chemical synthesis , Gangliosides/chemical synthesis , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Molecular Probes/chemical synthesis , CD59 Antigens/chemistry , CD59 Antigens/metabolism , Carbohydrate Conformation , Carbohydrate Sequence , Cell Line , Epithelial Cells/cytology , Epithelial Cells/metabolism , Fluorescent Dyes/chemical synthesis , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , G(M1) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , G(M1) Ganglioside/metabolism , G(M2) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , G(M2) Ganglioside/metabolism , G(M3) Ganglioside/analogs & derivatives , G(M3) Ganglioside/metabolism , Gangliosides/metabolism , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Membrane Microdomains/ultrastructure , Molecular Probes/metabolism , Single Molecule Imaging
15.
Cell Biochem Biophys ; 75(3-4): 399-412, 2017 Dec.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28646414

The central mechanism for the transmission of the prion protein misfolding is the structural conversion of the normal cellular prion protein to the pathogenic misfolded prion protein, by the interaction with misfolded prion protein. This process might be enhanced due to the homo-dimerization/oligomerization of normal prion protein. However, the behaviors of normal prion protein in the plasma membrane have remained largely unknown. Here, using single fluorescent-molecule imaging, we found that both prion protein and Thy1, a control glycosylphosphatidylinositol-anchored protein, exhibited very similar intermittent transient immobilizations lasting for a few seconds within an area of 24.2 and 3.5 nm in diameter in CHO-K1 and hippocampal neurons cultured for 1- and 2-weeks, respectively. Prion protein molecules were immobile during 72% of the time, approximately 1.4× more than Thy1, due to prion protein's higher immobilization frequency. When mobile, prion protein diffused 1.7× slower than Thy1. Prion protein's slower diffusion might be caused by its transient interaction with other prion protein molecules, whereas its brief immobilization might be due to temporary association with prion protein clusters. Prion protein molecules might be newly recruited to prion protein clusters all the time, and simultaneously, prion protein molecules in the cluster might be departing continuously. Such dynamic interactions of normal prion protein molecules would strongly enhance the spreading of misfolded prion protein.


Cell Membrane/metabolism , Glycosylphosphatidylinositols/chemistry , Prion Proteins/metabolism , Thy-1 Antigens/metabolism , Animals , CHO Cells , Cell Membrane/chemistry , Cells, Cultured , Cricetinae , Cricetulus , Diffusion , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Glycosylphosphatidylinositols/metabolism , Hippocampus/cytology , Hippocampus/metabolism , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Prion Proteins/chemistry , Rats , Rats, Wistar , Thy-1 Antigens/chemistry
16.
J Cell Biol ; 216(4): 1183-1204, 2017 04 03.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28330937

Sphingomyelin (SM) has been proposed to form cholesterol-dependent raft domains and sphingolipid domains in the plasma membrane (PM). How SM contributes to the formation and function of these domains remains unknown, primarily because of the scarcity of suitable fluorescent SM analogs. We developed new fluorescent SM analogs by conjugating a hydrophilic fluorophore to the SM choline headgroup without eliminating its positive charge, via a hydrophilic nonaethylene glycol linker. The new analogs behaved similarly to the native SM in terms of their partitioning behaviors in artificial liquid order-disorder phase-separated membranes and detergent-resistant PM preparations. Single fluorescent molecule tracking in the live-cell PM revealed that they indirectly interact with each other in cholesterol- and sphingosine backbone-dependent manners, and that, for ∼10-50 ms, they undergo transient colocalization-codiffusion with a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored protein, CD59 (in monomers, transient-dimer rafts, and clusters), in CD59-oligomer size-, cholesterol-, and GPI anchoring-dependent manners. These results suggest that SM continually and rapidly exchanges between CD59-associated raft domains and the bulk PM.


Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , Sphingomyelins/metabolism , Animals , CD59 Antigens/metabolism , CHO Cells , Cell Line , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cholesterol/metabolism , Cricetulus , Detergents/metabolism , Glycosylphosphatidylinositols/metabolism , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , Sphingolipids/metabolism , Swine
17.
Sci Rep ; 6: 38910, 2016 12 13.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27958374

Telomeric repeat-containing RNA (TERRA) controls the structure and length of telomeres through interactions with numerous telomere-binding proteins. However, little is known about the mechanism by which TERRA regulates the accessibility of the proteins to telomeres, mainly because of the lack of spatiotemporal information of TERRA and its-interacting proteins. We developed a fluorescent probe to visualize endogenous TERRA to investigate its dynamics in living cells. Single-particle fluorescence imaging revealed that TERRA accumulated in a telomere-neighboring region and trapped diffusive heterogeneous nuclear ribonucleoprotein A1 (hnRNPA1), thereby inhibiting hnRNPA1 localization to the telomere. These results suggest that TERRA regulates binding of hnRNPA1 to the telomere in a region surrounding the telomere, leading to a deeper understanding of the mechanism of TERRA function.


Heterogeneous Nuclear Ribonucleoprotein A1/metabolism , Optical Imaging/methods , RNA Probes , RNA, Long Noncoding/metabolism , Telomere-Binding Proteins/metabolism , Telomere/metabolism , Cell Line , Fluorescent Dyes , Humans , Spatio-Temporal Analysis
18.
Nat Chem Biol ; 12(6): 402-10, 2016 06.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27043189

Gangliosides, glycosphingolipids containing one or more sialic acid(s) in the glyco-chain, are involved in various important physiological and pathological processes in the plasma membrane. However, their exact functions are poorly understood, primarily because of the scarcity of suitable fluorescent ganglioside analogs. Here, we developed methods for systematically synthesizing analogs that behave like their native counterparts in regard to partitioning into raft-related membrane domains or preparations. Single-fluorescent-molecule imaging in the live-cell plasma membrane revealed the clear but transient colocalization and codiffusion of fluorescent ganglioside analogs with a fluorescently labeled glycosylphosphatidylinisotol (GPI)-anchored protein, human CD59, with lifetimes of 12 ms for CD59 monomers, 40 ms for CD59's transient homodimer rafts in quiescent cells, and 48 ms for engaged-CD59-cluster rafts, in cholesterol- and GPI-anchoring-dependent manners. The ganglioside molecules were always mobile in quiescent cells. These results show that gangliosides continually and dynamically exchange between raft domains and the bulk domain, indicating that raft domains are dynamic entities.


CD59 Antigens/chemistry , CD59 Antigens/metabolism , Gangliosides/chemistry , Gangliosides/metabolism , Glycosylphosphatidylinositols/metabolism , Membrane Microdomains/metabolism , CD59 Antigens/analysis , Diffusion , Fluorescence , Gangliosides/analysis , Humans , Membrane Microdomains/chemistry , Molecular Conformation , Protein Binding , Time Factors
19.
Mol Biol Cell ; 27(7): 1101-19, 2016 Apr 01.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26864625

The mechanisms by which the diffusion rate in the plasma membrane (PM) is regulated remain unresolved, despite their importance in spatially regulating the reaction rates in the PM. Proposed models include entrapment in nanoscale noncontiguous domains found in PtK2 cells, slow diffusion due to crowding, and actin-induced compartmentalization. Here, by applying single-particle tracking at high time resolutions, mainly to the PtK2-cell PM, we found confined diffusion plus hop movements (termed "hop diffusion") for both a nonraft phospholipid and a transmembrane protein, transferrin receptor, and equal compartment sizes for these two molecules in all five of the cell lines used here (actual sizes were cell dependent), even after treatment with actin-modulating drugs. The cross-section size and the cytoplasmic domain size both affected the hop frequency. Electron tomography identified the actin-based membrane skeleton (MSK) located within 8.8 nm from the PM cytoplasmic surface of PtK2 cells and demonstrated that the MSK mesh size was the same as the compartment size for PM molecular diffusion. The extracellular matrix and extracellular domains of membrane proteins were not involved in hop diffusion. These results support a model of anchored TM-protein pickets lining actin-based MSK as a major mechanism for regulating diffusion.


Actin Cytoskeleton , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Phospholipids/chemistry , Receptors, Transferrin/chemistry , Animals , Cell Line , Diffusion , Humans , Models, Biological , Potoroidae , Rats
20.
Nanomaterials (Basel) ; 6(4)2016 Mar 25.
Article En | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28335184

The impeccable photostability of fluorescent nanodiamonds (FNDs) is an ideal property for use in fluorescence imaging of proteins in living cells. However, such an application requires highly specific labeling of the target proteins with FNDs. Furthermore, the surface of unmodified FNDs tends to adsorb biomolecules nonspecifically, which hinders the reliable targeting of proteins with FNDs. Here, we combined hyperbranched polyglycerol modification of FNDs with the ß-lactamase-tag system to develop a strategy for selective imaging of the protein of interest in cells. The combination of these techniques enabled site-specific labeling of Interleukin-18 receptor alpha chain, a membrane receptor, with FNDs, which eventually enabled tracking of the diffusion trajectory of FND-labeled proteins on the membrane surface.

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