Bioorthogonal Labeling Enables In Situ Fluorescence Imaging of Expressed Gas Vesicle Nanostructures.
Erik SchrunkPrzemys Çaw DutkaRobert C HurtDi WuMikhail G ShapiroPublished in: Bioconjugate chemistry (2024)
Gas vesicles (GVs) are proteinaceous nanostructures that, along with virus-like particles, encapsulins, nanocages, and other macromolecular assemblies, are being developed for potential biomedical applications. To facilitate such development, it would be valuable to characterize these nanostructures' subcellular assembly and localization. However, traditional fluorescent protein fusions are not tolerated by GVs' primary constituent protein, making optical microscopy a challenge. Here, we introduce a method for fluorescently visualizing intracellular GVs using the bioorthogonal label FlAsH, which becomes fluorescent upon reaction with the six-amino acid tetracysteine (TC) tag. We engineered the GV subunit protein, GvpA, to display the TC tag and showed that GVs bearing TC-tagged GvpA can be successfully assembled and fluorescently visualized in HEK 293T cells. Importantly, this was achieved by replacing only a fraction of GvpA with the tagged version. We used fluorescence images of the tagged GVs to study the GV size and distance distributions within these cells. This bioorthogonal and fractional labeling approach will enable research to provide a greater understanding of GVs and could be adapted to similar proteinaceous nanostructures.
Keyphrases
- amino acid
- fluorescence imaging
- living cells
- protein protein
- single molecule
- quantum dots
- high resolution
- photodynamic therapy
- induced apoptosis
- binding protein
- optical coherence tomography
- high speed
- room temperature
- label free
- carbon dioxide
- cell cycle arrest
- cell proliferation
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- mass spectrometry
- oxidative stress
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- fluorescent probe
- convolutional neural network
- ionic liquid