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1.
Conjugates of adenosine mimics and d-arginine-rich peptides (ARCs) are potent inhibitors of protein kinases (PKs) from the AGC group. Labeling ARCs with fluorescent dyes or immobilizing on chip surfaces gives fluorescent probes (ARC-Photo) and biosensors that can be used for high-throughput screening (HTS) of inhibitors of protein kinases. The bisubstrate character (simultaneous association with both binding sites of the kinase) and high affinity of ARCs allow ARC-based probes and sensors to be used for characterization of inhibitors targeted to either binding site of the kinase with affinities in whole nanomolar to micromolar range. The ability to penetrate cell plasma membrane and bind to the target kinase fused with a fluorescent protein leads to the possibility to use ARC-Photo probes for high content screening (HCS) of inhibitors in cellular milieu with detection of intensity of Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) between two fluorophores.  相似文献   

2.
We demonstrate theoretically and experimentally the quantification of Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) by direct and systematic saturation of the excited state of acceptor molecules. This version of acceptor depletion methods for FRET estimation, denoted as “satFRET” is reversible and suitable for time-resolved measurements. The technique was investigated theoretically using the steady-state solution of the differential equation system of donor and acceptor molecular states. The influence of acceptor photobleaching during measurement was included in the model. Experimental verification was achieved with the FRET-pair Alexa 546- Alexa 633 loaded on particles in different stoichiometries and measured in a confocal microscope. Estimates of energy transfer efficiency by excited state saturation were compared to those obtained by measurements of sensitised emission and acceptor photobleaching. The results lead to a protocol that allows time-resolved FRET measurements of fixed and living cells on a conventional confocal microscope. This procedure was applied to fixed Chinese hamster ovary cells containing a cyan fluorescent protein and yellow fluorescent protein pair. The time resolution of the technique was demonstrated in a live T cell activation assay comparing the FRET efficiencies measured using a genetically encoded green and red fluorescent protein biosensor for GTP/GDP turnover to those measured by acceptor photobleaching of fixed cells.  相似文献   

3.
Protein localization in living cells and tissues using FRET and FLIM   总被引:8,自引:0,他引:8  
Interacting proteins assemble into molecular machines that control cellular homeostasis in living cells. While the in vitro screening methods have the advantage of providing direct access to the genetic information encoding unknown protein partners, they do not allow direct access to interactions of these protein partners in their natural environment inside the living cell. Using wide-field, confocal, or two-photon (2p) fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) microscopy, this information can be obtained from living cells and tissues with nanometer resolution. One of the important conditions for FRET to occur is the overlap of the emission spectrum of the donor with the absorption spectrum of the acceptor. As a result of spectral overlap, the FRET signal is always contaminated by donor emission into the acceptor channel and by the excitation of acceptor molecules by the donor excitation wavelength. Mathematical algorithms are required to correct the spectral bleed-through signal in wide-field, confocal, and two-photon FRET microscopy. In contrast, spectral bleed-through is not an issue in FRET/FLIM imaging because only the donor fluorophore lifetime is measured; also, fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) measurements are independent of excitation intensity or fluorophore concentration. The combination of FRET and FLIM provides high spatial (nanometer) and temporal (nanosecond) resolution when compared to intensity-based FRET imaging. In this paper, we describe various FRET microscopy techniques and its application to protein-protein interactions.  相似文献   

4.
In this study, the applicability of fluorescently labeled adenosine analogue-oligoarginine conjugates (ARC-Photo probes) for monitoring of protein kinase A (PKA) activity in living cells was demonstrated. ARC-Photo probes possessing subnanomolar affinity towards the catalytic subunit of PKA (PKAc) and competitive with the regulatory subunit (PKAr), penetrate cell plasma membrane and associate with PKAc fused with yellow fluorescent protein (PKAc-YFP). Detection of inter-molecular Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) efficiency between the fluorophores of the fusion protein and ARC-Photo probe can be used for both the evaluation of non-labeled inhibitors of PKAc and for monitoring of cAMP signaling via detection of changes in the activity of PKA as a cAMP downstream effector.  相似文献   

5.
We report here an extension of homogeneous assays based on fluorescence intensity and lifetime measuring on DNA hybridization. A novel decay probe that allows simple one-step nucleic acid detection with subnanomolar sensitivity, and is suitable for closed-tube applications, is introduced. The decay probe uses fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) between a europium chelate donor and an organic fluorophore acceptor. The substantial change in the acceptor emission decay time on hybridization with the target sequence allows the direct separation of the hybridized and unhybridized probe populations in a time-resolved measurement. No additional sample manipulation or self-hybridization of the probes is required. The wavelength and decay time of a decay probe can be adjusted according to the selection of probe length and acceptor fluorophore, thereby making the probes applicable to multiplexed assays. Here we demonstrate the decay probe principle and decay probe-based, one-step, dual DNA assay using celiac disease-related target oligonucleotides (single-nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs]) as model analytes. Decay probes showed specific response for their complementary DNA target and allowed good signal deconvolution based on simultaneous optical and temporal filtering. This technique potentially could be used to further increase the number of simultaneously detected DNA targets in a simple one-step homogeneous assay.  相似文献   

6.
Responsive ARC-Lum probes were used for measurement of the concentration of active protein kinases (PKs) and determination of affinity of inhibitors of PKs. ARC-Lum probes incorporate thiophene or a selenophene heterocycle and a fluorophore conjugated to the lysine residue in the peptide fragment. In the complex with a PK, ARC-Lum probes emit long-lifetime (microsecond-scale) luminescence at the emission wavelengths of the fluorescent label if the complex is illuminated at the excitation wavelength of the thiophene- or selenophene-containing phosphorescence donors. Bisubstrate ARC-Lum probes bind with sub-nanomolar affinity with several PKs of the AGC group. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Inhibitors of Protein Kinases (2012).  相似文献   

7.
Far-red fluorescent proteins are required for deep-tissue and whole-animal imaging and multicolor labeling in the red wavelength range, as well as probes excitable with standard red lasers in flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy. Rapidly evolving superresolution microscopy based on the stimulated emission depletion approach also demands genetically encoded monomeric probes to tag intracellular proteins at the molecular level. Based on the monomeric mKate variant, we have developed a far-red TagRFP657 protein with excitation/emission maxima at 611/657 nm. TagRFP657 has several advantages over existing monomeric far-red proteins including higher photostability, better pH stability, lower residual green fluorescence, and greater efficiency of excitation with red lasers. The red-shifted excitation and emission spectra, as compared to other far-red proteins, allows utilizing TagRFP657 in flow cytometry and fluorescence microscopy simultaneously with orange or near-red fluorescence proteins. TagRFP657 is shown to be an efficient protein tag for the superresolution fluorescence imaging using a commercially available stimulated emission depletion microscope.  相似文献   

8.
A previously disclosed protein kinase (PK) CK2-selective inhibitor 4-(2-amino-1,3-thiazol-5-yl)benzoic acid (ATB) and its selenium-containing counterpart (ASB) revealed remarkable room temperature phosphorescence when bound to the ATP pocket of the protein kinase CK2. Conjugation of these fragments with a mimic of CK2 substrate peptide resulted in bisubstrate inhibitors with increased affinity towards the kinase. Attachment of the fluorescent acceptor dye 5-TAMRA to the conjugates led to significant enhancement of intensity of long-lifetime (microsecond-scale) photoluminescence of both sulfur- and selenium-containing compounds. The developed photoluminescent probes make possible selective determination of the concentration of CK2 in cell lysates and characterization of CK2 inhibitors by means of time-gated measurement of photoluminescence.  相似文献   

9.
We report what to our knowledge is a novel approach for simultaneous imaging of two different Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) sensors in the same cell with minimal spectral cross talk. Previous methods based on spectral ratiometric imaging of the two FRET sensors have been limited by the availability of suitably bright acceptors for the second FRET pair and the spectral cross talk incurred when measuring in four spectral windows. In contrast to spectral ratiometric imaging, fluorescence lifetime imaging (FLIM) requires measurement of the donor fluorescence only and is independent of emission from the acceptor. By combining FLIM-FRET of the novel red-shifted TagRFP/mPlum FRET pair with spectral ratiometric imaging of an ECFP/Venus pair we were thus able to maximize the spectral separation between our chosen fluorophores while at the same time overcoming the low quantum yield of the far red acceptor mPlum. Using this technique, we could read out a TagRFP/mPlum intermolecular FRET sensor for reporting on small Ras GTP-ase activation in live cells after epidermal growth factor stimulation and an ECFP/Venus Cameleon FRET sensor for monitoring calcium transients within the same cells. The combination of spectral ratiometric imaging of ECFP/Venus and high-speed FLIM-FRET of TagRFP/mPlum can thus increase the spectral bandwidth available and provide robust imaging of multiple FRET sensors within the same cell. Furthermore, since FLIM does not require equal stoichiometries of donor and acceptor, this approach can be used to report on both unimolecular FRET biosensors and protein-protein interactions with the same cell.  相似文献   

10.
Protein kinase (PK)-responsive nanoparticles (NPs) comprising a hydrophobically modified peptide substrate for PKs and a fluorescein-labeled polyanion (pA-F) were reported for monitoring PK activity via fluorescence intensity measurements. In this system, the formation of NPs by mixing lipopeptides and pA-Fs results in fluorescence quenching, while the quenched fluorescence recovered following dissociation of the NPs owing to the phosphorylation reaction of PKs. Eleven lipopeptides with different hydrophobic moieties (hydrocarbon and lithocholic acid) and four pA-Fs having main chains with differing flexibilities and fluorescein contents were synthesized and used to fabricate a series of twenty-four PK-responsive NP probes. The responses of the PK-responsive NP probes to PKs were evaluated to screen the most suitable NP probes. The assay system was then used to determine the IC(50) values for five inhibitors, the results of which were very similar to those previously reported. Thus, PK-responsive NPs are useful tools for high-throughput screening (HTS) of PK inhibitors.  相似文献   

11.
A new baculovirus-based fluorescence resonance energy transfer (Bv-FRET) assay for measuring multimerization of cell surface molecules in living cells is described. It has been demonstrated that gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor (GnRH-R) was capable of forming oligomeric complexes in the plasma membrane under normal physiological conditions. The mouse gonadotropin-releasing hormone receptor GnRH-R was used to evaluate the efficiency and potential applications of this assay. Two chimeric constructs of GnRH-R were made, one with green fluorescent protein as a donor fluorophore and the other with enhanced yellow fluorescent protein as an acceptor fluorophore. These chimeric constructs were coexpressed in an insect cell line (BTI Tn5 B1-4) using recombinant baculoviruses. Energy transfer occurred from the excited donor to the acceptor when they were in close proximity. The association of GnRH-R was demonstrated through FRET and the fluorescence observed using a Leica TSC-SPII confocal microscope. FRET was enhanced by the addition of a GnRH agonist but not by an antagonist. The Bv-FRET assay constitutes a highly efficient, reliable and convenient method for measuring protein-protein interaction as the baculovirus expression system is superior to other transfection-based methods. Additionally, the same insect cell line can be used routinely for expressing any recombinant proteins of interest, allowing various combinations of molecules to be tested in a rapid fashion for protein-protein interactions. The assay is a valuable tool not only for the screening of new molecules that interact with known bait molecules, but also for confirming interactions between other known molecules.  相似文献   

12.
Mitochondrial depolarization promotes apoptotic and necrotic cell death and possibly other cellular events. Polarized mitochondria take up cationic tetramethylrhodamine methylester (TMRM), which is released after depolarization. Thus, TMRM does not label depolarized mitochondria. To identify both polarized and depolarized mitochondria in living cells, cultured rat hepatocytes, and sinusoidal endothelial cells were co-loaded with green-fluorescing MitoTracker Green FM (MTG) and red-fluorescing TMRM for imaging by laser scanning confocal microscopy. Like TMRM, MTG is a cationic fluorophore that accumulates electrophoretically into polarized mitochondria. Unlike TMRM, MTG binds covalently to intramitochondrial protein thiols and remains bound after depolarization. In cells labeled only with MTG, excitation with blue (488 nm) light yielded green but almost no red fluorescence. After subsequent loading with TMRM, green MTG fluorescence became quenched. Instead, blue excitation yielded red fluorescence. Mitochondrial de-energization restored green fluorescence and abolished red fluorescence. Conversely, when MTG was added to TMRM-labeled cells, red fluorescence excited by blue light was enhanced, an effect again reversed by de-energization. These observations of reversible quenching of donor fluorescence and augmentation of acceptor fluorescence signify fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). In undisturbed hepatocytes, spontaneous depolarization of a subfraction of mitochondria was an ongoing phenomenon. In conclusion, confocal FRET discriminates individual depolarized mitochondria against a background of hundreds of polarized mitochondria.  相似文献   

13.
The control of cell death is an intricate process involving a multitude of intracellular modulators. Among these molecules, the caspases have a central role and have become an interesting group of enzymes in the current pharmaceutical industry. We have developed a novel dual-step fluorescence energy transfer-based separation-free assay method for the primary screening of caspase-3 inhibitors in vitro. This method relies on fluorescent europium(III)-chelate-doped nanoparticle donors coated with streptavidin in conjunction with a dual-labeled (N-terminal Alexa Fluor 680 fluorescent acceptor and C-terminal BlackBerry Quencher 650) caspase-3-specific peptide substrate modified with a biotinyl moiety. In the assay, the nanoparticle donor excites the fluorescent acceptor, whose emission is monitored with time-resolved measurements. The intensity of the acceptor reflects the activity of the enzyme because the intensity is controlled by the proximity of the quencher. Owing to the dual-step fluorescence resonance energy transfer, this method enables a sensitized fluorescence signal directly proportional to the extent of enzymatic activity with relatively background fluorescence-free measurements in the event of complete enzyme inhibition. The generic nanoparticle donors further promote versatility and cost-efficiency of the method. The performance evaluated as the inhibitor (Z-DEVD-FMK) dose-response curve (IC(50) value of approximately 12 nM) was in good agreement with that of the recent methods found in literature. This assay serves as a model application proving the feasibility of the europium-chelate-doped nanoparticle labels in a homogeneous assay for proteolytic activity.  相似文献   

14.
We present an improved monomeric form of the red fluorescent protein, mRFP1, as the acceptor in biological fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) experiments using the enhanced green fluorescent protein as donor. We find particular advantage in using this fluorophore pair for quantitative measurements of FRET using multiphoton fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM). The technique was exploited to demonstrate a novel receptor-kinase interaction between the chemokine receptor (CXCR4) and protein kinase C (PKC) alpha in carcinoma cells for both live- and fixed-cell experiments. The CXCR4-EGFP: PKCalpha-mRFP1 complex was found to be localized precisely to intracellular vesicles and cell protrusions when imaged by multiphoton fluorescence-FLIM. A comparison of the FRET efficiencies obtained using mRFP1-tagged regulatory domain or full-length PKCalpha as the acceptor revealed that PKCalpha, in the closed (inactive) form, is restrained from associating with the cytoplasmic portion of CXCR4. Live-cell FLIM experiments show that the assembly of this receptor:kinase complex is concomitant with the endocytosis process. This is confirmed by experimental evidence suggesting that the recycling of the CXCR4 receptor is increased on stimulation with phorbol ester and blocked on inhibition of PKC by bisindolylmaleimide. The EGFP-mRFP1 couple should be widely applicable, particularly to live-cell quantitative FRET assays.  相似文献   

15.
Luminescence Resonance Energy Transfer, or LRET, is a powerful technique used to measure distances between two sites in proteins within the distance range of 10-100 Å. By measuring the distances under various ligated conditions, conformational changes of the protein can be easily assessed. With LRET, a lanthanide, most often chelated terbium, is used as the donor fluorophore, affording advantages such as a longer donor-only emission lifetime, the flexibility to use multiple acceptor fluorophores, and the opportunity to detect sensitized acceptor emission as an easy way to measure energy transfer without the risk of also detecting donor-only signal. Here, we describe a method to use LRET on membrane proteins expressed and assayed on the surface of intact mammalian cells. We introduce a protease cleavage site between the LRET fluorophore pair. After obtaining the original LRET signal, cleavage at that site removes the specific LRET signal from the protein of interest allowing us to quantitatively subtract the background signal that remains after cleavage. This method allows for more physiologically relevant measurements to be made without the need for purification of protein.  相似文献   

16.
Evidence suggests membrane bound F1F0-ATPase complexes form stable associations such that dimers can be retrieved from detergent lysates of mitochondria isolated from a range of sources including algae, higher plants, yeast and bovine heart, and plant chloroplasts. The physiological relevance of these interactions is not clear but may be connected with the formation and structure of mitochondrial cristae. We sought to demonstrate, in vivo, the association of F1F0-ATPases in yeast cells co-expressing two b subunits each fused at its C-terminus to a GFP variant appropriate for fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET; BFP as the donor and GFP as the acceptor fluorophore). Both subunit b-GFP and b-BFP fusions were assembled into functional complexes. FRET was observed from enzyme complexes in molecular proximity in respiring cells providing the first demonstration of the association, in vivo, of F1F0-ATPase complexes. Moreover, FRET was observed within cells lacking the dimer specific subunit e, indicating structured associations can occur within the inner membrane in the absence of subunit e.  相似文献   

17.
Homogeneous noncompetitive assay of a protein in biological samples based on Förster-resonance-energy-transfer (FRET) was proposed by using its tryptophan residues as intrinsic donors and its specific fluorescent ligand as the FRET acceptor that was defined as an analytical FRET probe. Conjugate of a suitable fluorophore, which should have an excitation peak around 340 nm but an excitation valley around 280 nm, with a moiety binding to a protein of interest gave an analytical FRET probe to the protein. To test this method, N-biotinyl-N′-(1-naphthyl)-ethylenediamine (BNEDA) was used as an analytical FRET probe for homogeneous noncompetitive assay of streptavidin (SAV). The occurrence of FRET between the bound BNEDA and tryptophan residues was supported by the modeled geometry of the complex. By excitation at 280 nm, free BNEDA produced negligible fluorescence at 430 nm, but the bound BNEDA produced much higher stable fluorescence at 430 nm after 2 min of binding reaction. The competitive binding between BNEDA and biotin gave the dissociation constant of (16 ± 3) fM for BNEDA (n = 3). By excitation at 280 nm, fluorescence at 430 nm of reaction mixtures containing 32.0 nM BNEDA responded linearly to SAV subunit concentrations ranging from 0.40 to 30.0 nM with the desirable resistance to common interferences in biological samples. Therefore, by using tryptophan residue(s) in a protein of interest as intrinsic donor(s) and its fluorescent ligand as the corresponding FRET acceptor, this homogeneous noncompetitive assay of the protein in biological samples was effective and advantageous.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescent proteins with a wide variety of physicochemical properties have evolved in the past few years. The use of these proteins for applications in biomolecular nanosciences requires their precise positioning at the nanometer length scale. To address this challenge, we report here on the self-organization of DNA-tagged fluorescent probes to construct a set of photofunctional supramolecular complexes which include the enhanced yellow fluorescent protein (EYFP). The optical functionality is based on the strongly distance dependent fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), occurring between the donor (EYFP) and an acceptor fluorophore, i.e., the fluorescent dye Atto647. The photophysical properties of four bimolecular FRET complexes, each possessing a well-defined donor-acceptor distance defined by the length of the interconnecting DNA backbone, are investigated by two-dimensional photoluminescence excitation spectroscopy (2D-PLE).  相似文献   

19.
The orientation factor κ2, one of the key parameters defining Förster resonance energy transfer efficiency, is determined by the transition dipole moment orientations of the donor and acceptor species. Using the results of quantum chemical and quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical calculations for the chromophore-containing pockets in selected colored proteins of the green fluorescent protein family, we derived transition dipole moments corresponding to the S0,min → S1 excitation for green fluorescent protein, red fluorescent protein (TagRFP), and kindling fluorescent protein, and the S1,min → S0 emission for TagRFP. These data allowed us to estimate κ2 values for the TagRFP-linker-kindling fluorescent protein tetrameric complex required for constructing novel sensors.  相似文献   

20.
The interaction of immunoglobulin E (IgE) antibodies with the high-affinity receptor, FcεRI, plays a central role in initiating most allergic reactions. The IgE–receptor interaction has been targeted for treatment of allergic diseases, and many high-affinity macromolecular inhibitors have been identified. Small molecule inhibitors would offer significant advantages over current anti-IgE treatment, but no candidate compounds have been identified and fully validated. Here, we report the development of a time-resolved fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR–FRET) assay for monitoring the IgE–receptor interaction. The TR–FRET assay measures an increase in fluorescence intensity as a donor lanthanide fluorophore is recruited into complexes of site-specific Alexa Fluor 488-labeled IgE-Fc and His-tagged FcεRIα proteins. The assay can readily monitor classic competitive inhibitors that bind either IgE-Fc or FcεRIα in equilibrium competition binding experiments. Furthermore, the TR–FRET assay can also be used to follow the kinetics of IgE-Fc–FcεRIα dissociation and identify inhibitory ligands that accelerate the dissociation of preformed complexes, as demonstrated for an engineered DARPin (designed ankyrin repeat protein) inhibitor. The TR–FRET assay is suitable for high-throughput screening (HTS), as shown by performing a pilot screen of the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Clinical Collection Library in a 384-well plate format.  相似文献   

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