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1.
Biophys J ; 122(18): 3646-3655, 2023 09 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37085995

ABSTRACT

Imaging two or more fluorescent biosensors in the same living cell can reveal the spatiotemporal coordination of protein activities. However, using multiple Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) biosensors together is challenging due to toxicity and the need for orthogonal fluorophores. Here we generate a biosensor component that binds selectively to the activated conformation of three different proteins. This enabled multiplexed FRET with fewer fluorophores, and reduced toxicity. We generated this MultiBinder (MB) reagent for the GTPases RhoA, Rac1, and Cdc42 by combining portions of the downstream effector proteins Pak1 and Rhotekin. Using FRET between mCherry on the MB and YPet or mAmetrine on two target proteins, the activities of any pair of GTPases could be distinguished. The MB was used to image Rac1 and RhoA together with a third, dye-based biosensor for Cdc42. Quantifying effects of biosensor combinations on the frequency, duration, and velocity of cell protrusions and retractions demonstrated reduced toxicity. Multiplexed imaging revealed signaling hierarchies between the three proteins at the cell edge where they regulate motility.


Subject(s)
Biosensing Techniques , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein , cdc42 GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , rhoA GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer/methods , Cell Surface Extensions , Coloring Agents , Biosensing Techniques/methods , rac1 GTP-Binding Protein/metabolism , rho GTP-Binding Proteins/metabolism
2.
Opt Express ; 27(14): 19950-19972, 2019 Jul 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31503749

ABSTRACT

We developed VIEW-MOD (Versatile Illumination Engine with a Modular Optical Design): a compact, multi-modality microscope, which accommodates multiple illumination schemes including variable angle total internal reflection, point scanning and vertical/horizontal light sheet. This system allows combining and flexibly switching between different illuminations and imaging modes by employing three electrically tunable lenses and two fast-steering mirrors. This versatile optics design provides control of 6 degrees of freedom of the illumination source (3 translation, 2 tilt, and beam shape) plus the axial position of the imaging plane. We also developed standalone software with an easy-to-use GUI to calibrate and control the microscope. We demonstrate the applications of this system and software in biosensor imaging, optogenetics and fast 3D volume imaging. This system is ready to fit into complex imaging circumstances requiring precise control of illumination and detection paths, and has a broad scope of usability for a myriad of biological applications.

3.
Biochemistry ; 57(39): 5648-5653, 2018 10 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30204425

ABSTRACT

Inducible chemical-genetic fluorescent markers are promising tools for live cell imaging requiring high spatiotemporal resolution and low background fluorescence. The fluorescence-activating and absorption shifting tag (FAST) was recently developed to form fluorescent molecular complexes with a family of small, synthetic fluorogenic chromophores (so-called fluorogens). Here, we use rational design to modify the binding pocket of the protein and screen for improved fluorescence performances with four different fluorogens. The introduction of a single mutation results in improvements in both quantum yield and dissociation constant with nearly all fluorogens tested. Our improved FAST (iFAST) allowed the generation of a tandem iFAST (td-iFAST) that forms green and red fluorescent reporters 1.6-fold and 2-fold brighter than EGFP and mCherry, respectively, while having a comparable size.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Photoreceptors, Microbial/chemistry , Rhodanine/analogs & derivatives , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/radiation effects , Binding Sites , Escherichia coli/chemistry , Fluorescence , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , HEK293 Cells , Halorhodospira halophila/chemistry , Humans , Light , Microscopy, Confocal , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Mutation , Photobleaching/radiation effects , Photoreceptors, Microbial/genetics , Photoreceptors, Microbial/metabolism , Photoreceptors, Microbial/radiation effects , Protein Binding , Rhodanine/metabolism , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
4.
ACS Chem Biol ; 13(9): 2392-2397, 2018 09 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30088915

ABSTRACT

Fluorescent reporters are essential components for the design of optical biosensors that are able to image intracellular analytes in living cells. Herein, we describe the development of circularly permuted variants of Fluorescence-Activating and absorption-Shifting Tag (FAST) and demonstrate their potential as reporting module in biosensors. Circularly permutated FAST (cpFAST) variants allow one to condition the binding and activation of a fluorogenic ligand (and thus fluorescence) to analyte recognition by coupling them with analyte-binding domains. We demonstrated their use for biosensor design by generating multicolor plug-and-play fluorogenic biosensors for imaging the intracellular levels of Ca2+ in living mammalian cells in real time.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Biosensing Techniques/methods , Calcium/analysis , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , Optical Imaging/methods , Photoreceptors, Microbial/metabolism , Rhodanine/metabolism , Bacterial Proteins/chemistry , Calcium/metabolism , Fluorescence , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , HeLa Cells , Humans , Ligands , Microscopy, Fluorescence/methods , Photoreceptors, Microbial/chemistry , Protein Binding , Rhodanine/analogs & derivatives
5.
Sci Rep ; 7(1): 12316, 2017 09 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28951577

ABSTRACT

Fluorogen-binding tags, which activate the fluorescence of a specific chromophore (so-called fluorogen) upon reversible binding, have recently been proposed as a way of reducing photobleaching via fluorogen renewal. However, no generic methodology has been proposed to systematically analyze the photodamage of the fluorogen and the protein tag. Using Y-FAST (Yellow Fluorescence-activating and Absorption-Shifting Tag) as a case study we propose here a generic experimental and theoretical approach to assess how fluorogen renewal reduces the apparent photobleaching rate of a fluorogen-binding tag. Y-FAST has its apparent photobleaching rate greatly reduced by fluorogen renewal and its photostability is mainly limited by oxidation of specific residues in the protein scaffold by reactive oxygen species generated by the bound fluorogen. This study sets the groundwork for the optimization of fluorogenic systems, helping guide rational improvements to their photostability.

6.
Integr Biol (Camb) ; 8(2): 177-93, 2016 Feb.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26878203

ABSTRACT

Selected singlet oxygen photosensitizers have been examined from the perspective of obtaining a molecule that is sufficiently stable under conditions currently employed to study singlet oxygen behavior in single mammalian cells. Reasonable predictions about intracellular sensitizer stability can be made based on solution phase experiments that approximate the intracellular environment (e.g., solutions containing proteins). Nevertheless, attempts to construct a stable sensitizer based solely on the expected reactivity of a given functional group with singlet oxygen are generally not sufficient for experiments in cells; it is difficult to construct a suitable chromophore that is impervious to all of the secondary and/or competing degradative processes that are present in the intracellular environment. On the other hand, prospects are reasonably positive when one considers the use of a sensitizer encapsulated in a specific protein; the local environment of the chromophore is controlled, degradation as a consequence of bimolecular reactions can be mitigated, and genetic engineering can be used to localize the encapsulated sensitizer in a given cellular domain. Also, the option of directly exciting oxygen in sensitizer-free experiments provides a useful complementary tool. These latter systems bode well with respect to obtaining more accurate control of the "dose" of singlet oxygen used to perturb a cell; a parameter that currently limits mechanistic studies of singlet-oxygen-mediated cell signaling.


Subject(s)
Oxygen/chemistry , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Singlet Oxygen/chemistry , Animals , Cattle , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Fullerenes/chemistry , Genetic Engineering , HeLa Cells , Humans , Photobleaching , Serum Albumin/chemistry , Signal Transduction
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 113(3): 497-502, 2016 Jan 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26711992

ABSTRACT

This paper presents Yellow Fluorescence-Activating and absorption-Shifting Tag (Y-FAST), a small monomeric protein tag, half as large as the green fluorescent protein, enabling fluorescent labeling of proteins in a reversible and specific manner through the reversible binding and activation of a cell-permeant and nontoxic fluorogenic ligand (a so-called fluorogen). A unique fluorogen activation mechanism based on two spectroscopic changes, increase of fluorescence quantum yield and absorption red shift, provides high labeling selectivity. Y-FAST was engineered from the 14-kDa photoactive yellow protein by directed evolution using yeast display and fluorescence-activated cell sorting. Y-FAST is as bright as common fluorescent proteins, exhibits good photostability, and allows the efficient labeling of proteins in various organelles and hosts. Upon fluorogen binding, fluorescence appears instantaneously, allowing monitoring of rapid processes in near real time. Y-FAST distinguishes itself from other tagging systems because the fluorogen binding is highly dynamic and fully reversible, which enables rapid labeling and unlabeling of proteins by addition and withdrawal of the fluorogen, opening new exciting prospects for the development of multiplexing imaging protocols based on sequential labeling.


Subject(s)
Absorption, Radiation , Imaging, Three-Dimensional , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Animals , Cell Survival , Embryo, Nonmammalian/metabolism , Fluorescence , Genetic Engineering , HeLa Cells , Humans , Staining and Labeling , Subcellular Fractions/metabolism , Zebrafish/embryology
8.
Photochem Photobiol Sci ; 14(6): 1138-46, 2015 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25940688

ABSTRACT

The photophysical properties of two indoline-based octupolar merocyanine dyes and of the corresponding quinoline-based dyes were examined. This seemingly subtle structural change in the chromophore of these molecules has an appreciable effect on the yields with which these respective compounds sensitize the production of singlet molecular oxygen, O2(a(1)Δg). The indoline-based dyes are reasonably efficient O2(a(1)Δg) sensitizers (Ï•Δ âˆ¼ 0.35), whereas the quinoline-based dyes are poor O2(a(1)Δg) sensitizers (Ï•Δ âˆ¼ 0.005). A series of experiments, including Laser-Induced Optoacoustic Calorimetric (LIOAC) measurements, reveal that this difference principally reflects the fact that the excited singlet state of the quinoline-based dyes rapidly and efficiently decays via nonradiative channels to regenerate the ground state molecule. It is likely that a charge-transfer state mediates this efficient coupling between the excited and ground states. Such subtle, structure-dependent effects are important in elucidating and ultimately understanding phenomena that influence the efficiency of photosensitized O2(a(1)Δg) production. In turn, the knowledge gained facilitates the rational design and preparation of O2(a(1)Δg) sensitizers with explicitly controlled properties.

9.
Photochem Photobiol Sci ; 14(4): 665-77, 2015 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25554241

ABSTRACT

When dissolved in a bulk solvent, bilirubin efficiently removes singlet molecular oxygen, O2(a(1)Δg), through a combination of chemical reactions and by promoting the O2(a(1)Δg)→O2(X(3)Σg(-)) nonradiative transition to populate the ground state of oxygen. To elucidate how such processes can be exploited in the development of a biologically useful fluorescent probe for O2(a(1)Δg), pertinent photophysical and photochemical parameters of bilirubin encapsulated in a protein were determined. The motivation for studying a protein-encapsulated system reflects the ultimate desire to (a) use genetic engineering to localize the probe at a specific location in a living cell, and (b) provide a controlled environment around the chromophore/fluorophore. Surprisingly, explicit values of oxygen- and O2(a(1)Δg)-dependent parameters that characterize the behavior of a given chromophore/fluorophore encased in a protein are not generally available. To the end of quantifying the effects of such an encasing protein, a recently discovered bilirubin-binding protein isolated from a Japanese eel was used. The data show that this system indeed preferentially responds to O2(a(1)Δg) and not to the superoxide ion. However, this protein not only shields bilirubin such that the rate constants for interaction with O2(a(1)Δg) decrease relative to what is observed in a bulk solvent, but the fraction of the total O2(a(1)Δg)-bilirubin interaction that results in a chemical reaction between O2(a(1)Δg) and bilirubin also decreases appreciably. The rate constants thus obtained provide a useful starting point for the general design and development of reactive protein-encased fluorescent probes for O2(a(1)Δg).


Subject(s)
Bilirubin/chemistry , Fish Proteins/chemistry , Singlet Oxygen/analysis , Animals , Circular Dichroism , Eels , Escherichia coli , Fish Proteins/isolation & purification , Fluorescence , Hydrogen Bonding , Ions/chemistry , Models, Molecular , Oxygen/analysis , Photochemical Processes , Protein Conformation , Solvents/chemistry , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Superoxides/chemistry
10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 137(4): 1632-42, 2015 Feb 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25575190

ABSTRACT

Singlet oxygen, O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)), plays a key role in many processes of cell signaling. Limitations in mechanistic studies of such processes are generally associated with the difficulty of controlling the amount and location of O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)) production in or on a cell. As such, there is great need for a system that (a) selectively produces O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)) in appreciable and accurately quantifiable yields and (b) can be localized in a specific place at the suborganelle level. A genetically encodable, protein-encased photosensitizer is one way to achieve this goal. Through a systematic and rational approach involving mutations to a LOV2 protein that binds the chromophore flavin mononucleotide (FMN), we have developed a promising photosensitizer that overcomes many of the problems that affect related systems currently in use. Specifically, by decreasing the extent of hydrogen bonding between FMN and a specific amino acid residue in the local protein environment, we decrease the susceptibility of FMN to undesired photoinitiated electron-transfer reactions that kinetically compete with O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)) production. As a consequence, our protein-encased FMN system produces O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)) with the uniquely large quantum efficiency of 0.25 ± 0.03. We have also quantified other key photophysical parameters that characterize this sensitizer system, including unprecedented H(2)O/D(2)O solvent isotope effects on the O(2)(a(1)Δ(g)) formation kinetics and yields. As such, our results facilitate future systematic developments in this field.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis/metabolism , Flavin Mononucleotide/metabolism , Photosensitizing Agents/metabolism , Phototropins/metabolism , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Singlet Oxygen/metabolism , Arabidopsis/chemistry , Arabidopsis/genetics , Escherichia coli/genetics , Models, Molecular , Mutagenesis, Site-Directed , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Phototropins/chemistry , Phototropins/genetics , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics
11.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 16(21): 9950-9, 2014 Jun 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24452275

ABSTRACT

Linear and nonlinear spectroscopic parameters of flavin mononucleotide, FMN, have been examined both experimentally and computationally under conditions in which FMN is (1) solvated in a buffered aqueous solution, and (2) encased in a protein that is likewise solvated in a buffered aqueous solution. The latter was achieved using "miniSOG" which is an FMN-containing protein engineered from Arabidopsis thaliana phototropin 2. Although it is reasonable to expect that the encasing protein could have an appreciable effect, certainly on the nonlinear two-photon absorption cross section, we find that replacing the dynamic aqueous environment with the more static protein environment does little to influence the spectroscopic properties of FMN. The experimental and computational studies are consistent in this regard, and this agreement indicates that comparatively high-level computational methods can indeed be used with success on large chromophores with a complicated local environment. The results of the present study facilitate the much-needed development of well-characterized and readily-controlled chromophores suitable for use as intracellular sensitizers and fluorophores.


Subject(s)
Arabidopsis Proteins/chemistry , Flavins/chemistry , Optics and Photonics , Phototropins/chemistry , Models, Molecular
12.
Photochem Photobiol ; 89(5): 1116-26, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23869989

ABSTRACT

Selected photochemical and photophysical parameters of flavin mononucleotide (FMN) have been examined under conditions in which FMN is (1) solvated in a buffered aqueous solution, and (2) encased in a protein likewise solvated in a buffered aqueous solution. The latter was achieved using the so-called "mini Singlet Oxygen Generator" (miniSOG), an FMN-containing flavoprotein engineered from Arabidopsis thaliana phototropin 2. Although FMN is a reasonably good singlet oxygen photosensitizer in bulk water (Ï•Δ = 0.65 ± 0.04), enclosing FMN in this protein facilitates photoinitiated electron-transfer reactions (Type-I chemistry) at the expense of photosensitized singlet oxygen production (Type-II chemistry) and results in a comparatively poor yield of singlet oxygen (Ï•Δ = 0.030 ± 0.002). This observation on the effect of the local environment surrounding FMN is supported by a host of spectroscopic and chemical trapping experiments. The results of this study not only elucidate the behavior of miniSOG but also provide useful information for the further development of well-characterized chromophores suitable for use as intracellular sensitizers in mechanistic studies of reactive oxygen species.


Subject(s)
Flavins/chemistry , Photochemistry , Singlet Oxygen/chemistry , Spectrometry, Fluorescence
13.
J Phys Chem B ; 116(34): 10234-46, 2012 Aug 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22857396

ABSTRACT

Controlling and quantifying the photosensitized production of singlet oxygen are key aspects in mechanistic studies of oxygen-dependent photoinitiated cell death. In this regard, the commonly accepted practice of using intracellular photosensitizers is, unfortunately, plagued by problems that include the inability to accurately (1) quantify the sensitizer concentration in the irradiated domain and (2) control the local environment that influences light delivery and sensitizer photophysics. However, capitalizing on the fact that singlet oxygen produced outside a cell is also cytotoxic, many of these problems can be avoided with the use of an extracellular sensitizer. For the present study, a hydrophilic dendrimer-encased membrane-impermeable sensitizer was used to generate an extracellular population of singlet oxygen upon spatially localized two-photon irradiation. Through the use of this sensitizer and this approach, it is now possible to better control the singlet oxygen dose in microscope-based time- and space-resolved single cell experiments. Thus, we provide a solution to a limiting problem in mechanistic studies of singlet-oxygen-mediated cell death.


Subject(s)
Organometallic Compounds/pharmacology , Photons , Photosensitizing Agents/pharmacology , Singlet Oxygen/metabolism , Cell Death/drug effects , Dendrimers/chemistry , Dendrimers/metabolism , Dendrimers/pharmacology , HeLa Cells , Humans , Hydrophobic and Hydrophilic Interactions , Molecular Structure , Organometallic Compounds/chemistry , Organometallic Compounds/metabolism , Photosensitizing Agents/chemistry , Photosensitizing Agents/metabolism , Singlet Oxygen/chemistry , Structure-Activity Relationship
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