OzTracs: Optical Osmolality Reporters Engineered from Mechanosensitive Ion Channels.
Thomas J KleistI Winnie LinSophia XuGrigory MaksaevMayuri SadoineElizabeth S HaswellWolf B FrommerMichael M WudickPublished in: Biomolecules (2022)
Interactions between physical forces and membrane proteins underpin many forms of environmental sensation and acclimation. Microbes survive osmotic stresses with the help of mechanically gated ion channels and osmolyte transporters. Plant mechanosensitive ion channels have been shown to function in defense signaling. Here, we engineered genetically encoded osmolality sensors (OzTracs) by fusing fluorescent protein spectral variants to the mechanosensitive ion channels MscL from E. coli or MSL10 from A. thaliana . When expressed in yeast cells, the OzTrac sensors reported osmolality changes as a proportional change in the emission ratio of the two fluorescent protein domains. Live-cell imaging revealed an accumulation of fluorescent sensors in internal aggregates, presumably derived from the endomembrane system. Thus, OzTrac sensors serve as osmolality-dependent reporters through an indirect mechanism, such as effects on molecular crowding or fluorophore solvation.
Keyphrases
- low cost
- quantum dots
- living cells
- high resolution
- induced apoptosis
- fluorescent probe
- escherichia coli
- label free
- physical activity
- protein protein
- mental health
- amino acid
- single cell
- molecular dynamics
- copy number
- binding protein
- optical coherence tomography
- computed tomography
- cell wall
- ionic liquid
- molecular dynamics simulations
- signaling pathway
- risk assessment
- climate change
- small molecule
- single molecule
- dna methylation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress