Rational Design of Far-Red Archaerhodopsin-3-Based Fluorescent Genetically Encoded Voltage Indicators: from Elucidation of the Fluorescence Mechanism in Archers to Novel Red-Shifted Variants.
Dmitrii M NikolaevVladimir N MironovEkaterina M MetelkinaAndrey A ShtyrovAndrey S MereshchenkoNikita A DemidovSergey Yu VyazminTatiana B TennikovaSvetlana E MoskalenkoStanislav A BondarevGalina A ZhouravlevaAndrey V VasinMaxim S PanovMikhail N RyazantsevPublished in: ACS physical chemistry Au (2024)
Genetically encoded voltage indicators (GEVIs) have found wide applications as molecular tools for visualization of changes in cell membrane potential. Among others, several classes of archaerhodopsin-3-based GEVIs have been developed and have proved themselves promising in various molecular imaging studies. To expand the application range for this type of GEVIs, new variants with absorption band maxima shifted toward the first biological window and enhanced fluorescence signal are required. Here, we integrate computational and experimental strategies to reveal structural factors that distinguish far-red bright archaerhodopsin-3-based GEVIs, Archers, obtained by directed evolution in a previous study (McIsaac et al., PNAS, 2014) and the wild-type archaerhodopsin-3 with an extremely dim fluorescence signal, aiming to use the obtained information in subsequent rational design. We found that the fluorescence can be enhanced by stabilization of a certain conformation of the protein, which, in turn, can be achieved by tuning the p K a value of two titratable residues. These findings were supported further by introducing mutations into wild-type archeorhodopsin-3 and detecting the enhancement of the fluorescence signal. Finally, we came up with a rational design and proposed previously unknown Archers variants with red-shifted absorption bands (λ max up to 640 nm) and potential-dependent bright fluorescence (quantum yield up to 0.97%).