AgHalo: A Facile Fluorogenic Sensor to Detect Drug-Induced Proteome Stress.
Liu YuMatthew FaresNoah P DunhamZi GaoKun MiaoXueyuan JiangSamuel S BollingerAmie K BoalZhang XinPublished in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2017)
Drug-induced proteome stress that involves protein aggregation may cause adverse effects and undermine the safety profile of a drug. Safety of drugs is regularly evaluated using cytotoxicity assays that measure cell death. However, these assays provide limited insights into the presence of proteome stress in live cells. A fluorogenic protein sensor is reported to detect drug-induced proteome stress prior to cell death. An aggregation prone Halo-tag mutant (AgHalo) was evolved to sense proteome stress through its aggregation. Detection of such conformational changes was enabled by a fluorogenic ligand that fluoresces upon AgHalo forming soluble aggregates. Using 5 common anticancer drugs, we exemplified detection of differential proteome stress before any cell death was observed. Thus, this sensor can be used to evaluate drug safety in a regime that the current cytotoxicity assays cannot cover and be generally applied to detect proteome stress induced by other toxins.
Keyphrases
- drug induced
- liver injury
- cell death
- cell cycle arrest
- adverse drug
- stress induced
- high throughput
- heat stress
- induced apoptosis
- molecular dynamics
- loop mediated isothermal amplification
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- signaling pathway
- molecular dynamics simulations
- small molecule
- single cell
- amino acid
- quantum dots
- sensitive detection