| Literature DB >> 26861174 |
Simon A James1,2, Dominic J Hare1,3, Nicole L Jenkins1, Martin D de Jonge2, Ashley I Bush1, Gawain McColl1.
Abstract
We have developed an X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy method using fluorescence detection for visualizing in vivo coordination environments of metals in biological specimens. This approach, which we term fluorescence imaging XANES (φXANES), allows us to spatially depict metal-protein associations in a native, hydrated state whilst avoiding intrinsic chemical damage from radiation. This method was validated using iron-challenged Caenorhabditis elegans to observe marked alterations in redox environment.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26861174 PMCID: PMC4748213 DOI: 10.1038/srep20350
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Optimization of φXANES parameters to minimize sample perturbation.
(a) Reference X-ray fluorescence micrograph showing Compton scatter (greyscale) and quantitation of calcium (yellow) and iron (rainbow color scale) in a dried adult C. elegans as a reference of general anatomy. (b) A map of iron distribution (rainbow color scale) was recorded at 7282 eV and used to select two sub-regions for reanalysis: the dashed white box was selected for high dose φXANES (114 scans) followed by a final map at 7282 eV, while the ‘control’ area (solid white box) was mapped at 7282 eV twice only; prior to and post completion of φXANES on the first region. With the exception of incident energy, all scan parameters were held constant for this series of measurements and the dose associated with recording each map was ~5 MGy. Comparing the first (blue) and last (yellow) maps (over a 5 hour period, shown in overlay where white represents colocalization) from each sub-region showed that high dose φXANES induced significant redistribution (ICA quotient Q = 0.006) of iron compared to the region mapped only twice (Q = 0.41). (c) The distribution of iron was also mapped using low dose φXANES. Total dose for these maps was 0.05 MGy. ICA comparing the first and last maps revealed strong agreement of iron signal (Q = 0.37), consistent with a minimally disturbed system. Scale bar for all images = 100 μm.
Figure 2Loss of ferritin skews iron load and Fe(III):total iron ratio.
(a) XFM of wild type and ferritin nulls ± high iron. Ferritin nulls exhibited reduced total iron, but, as expected, retained capacity to uptake iron via a mechanism independent of ferritin. White outline demarcates the boundary of each animal, color table defines iron areal density (μg cm−2) and the scale bar = 100 μm. (b) Median iron areal density for each specimen, showing elevated iron load following exposure to high iron (n = number of specimens per group; data presented as the mean of the medians ± 1 SD). (c) Iron XANES spectra (across all pixels) extracted from low dose φXANES for the groups shown in (a). The starting position of iron K-edge (7112 eV) is marked with a vertical line and for clarity the integrated XANES spectra from each group has been offset vertically. (d) Expanding the pre-edge region (grey box in (c)), following subtraction of the rising edge (dashed line), highlights changes in both the energy and intensity of the 1s → 3d pre-edge feature between groups. The extracted data (colored circles) and fitted Gaussian (solid black lines; 95% confidence interval in grey) are superimposed to determine the centroid values (~7114 eV for wild type; marked for reference). Loss of ferritin changed the pre-edge feature to exhibit two centroid energies (7113 eV and 7117 eV), whereas high iron exposure retained a single centroid energy of 7114 eV. (e) Areas of similar iron XANES spectra identified via principal component analysis and k-means clustering marked as distinct regions of interest (ROIs, six per specimen). The XANES spectra for each cluster were highly structured and allowed the Fe(III):total iron ratio to be calculated for each ROI. The spatial extent of each region as a proportion of the area scanned is shown and highlights that, with the exception of portions of the intestine, the majority of wild type tissues possess relatively low Fe(II) levels despite a higher iron load. In particular, two regions differed significantly in Fe(III):total iron ratio (ROIs 1 and 5; both localized along the intestinal tract) between wild type and ferritin nulls. Scale bar = 100 μm. (f) XANES from a purified horse spleen ferritin standard was compared to the cumulative XANES spectra from ROIs 1 and 5. (g) The difference (ΔXANES) between these two ROIs and the ferritin standard spectra showed that ROI1 had stark similarities with the ferritin profile, whilst ROI5, which was practically absent in wild types demonstrated significant variation from the ferritin XANES spectra, further supporting complete ablation of ferritin from these animals and an altered coordination environment. (h) Features characteristic of electronic transitions used to differentiate between iron oxidation states also revealed that ROI5 had a greater level of abundant Fe(II) compared to ROI1 and the ferritin standard, where the majority of iron is stabilized in a mineralized Fe(III) form.