| Literature DB >> 27558844 |
Krishna C Mudumbi1, Eric C Schirmer2, Weidong Yang1.
Abstract
The normal distribution of nuclear envelope transmembrane proteins (NETs) is disrupted in several human diseases. NETs are synthesized on the endoplasmic reticulum and then transported from the outer nuclear membrane (ONM) to the inner nuclear membrane (INM). Quantitative determination of the distribution of NETs on the ONM and INM is limited in available approaches, which moreover provide no information about translocation rates in the two membranes. Here we demonstrate a single-point single-molecule FRAP microscopy technique that enables determination of distribution and translocation rates for NETs in vivo.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27558844 PMCID: PMC5007294 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12562
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Single-point single-molecule FRAP to study NET distribution along the NE.
(a) HeLa cell transfected with GFP tagged NET used to visualize the NE. The purple circle indicates the usual 5-μm illumination area used in bulk FRAP experiments and the red circle indicates single-point illumination area up to 0.5 μm used in this study. (b) Both the INM and ONM of the NE are studded with NETs fused to GFP. (c) Using single-point illumination, a small, 0.5-μm area of the NE is targeted and GFP fused NETs in this area are excited using a high laser power. (d) NETs in the laser excitation area, as well as those that diffuse into the area are photobleached. (e–g) Once the area is completely photobleached, diffusion events of freshly incoming GFP-NETs occur at the single-molecule level and can be precisely localized. (h) Localized single-molecule events from the ONM and INM are compiled and the data is fitted with Gaussian functions to determine 2D distribution of NETs along the NE. Scale bar: 1 μm.
Figure 2Super-resolution imaging and distribution of various NETs.
Wild-type LBR (WT LBR) (a). LBR Δ63–172 (b), NET51 (c) and Nesprin-3α (d). (i) Epi-fluorescent image of the NE of a HeLa cell transfected to express the NET of interest. The area that was photobleached and studied is boxed in red. (ii) Super-resolution image of the NE with the INM shown in red and the ONM shown in purple. To obtain these locations, typically ten 30-s single-molecule videos from a live cell yielded ∼10,000 spatial locations of NETs in the NE. Such measurements were repeated in ten different live cells. (iii) Two peak Gaussian fittings of the points collected from the NE showing the distribution of NETs along the NE. The INM to ONM ratio was determined by using the integrated area under the fitted curves. The shaded regions represent the width of the INM and ONM as determined by the full width at half maximum (FWHM) as determined by the fitting. (iv) Approximate concentration ratios of NET's distribution (pre-corrected) along the INM (red) and ONM (purple). The corrected ratios can be found in Table 1. (v) Illustrative representation of the GFP fused NETs used in this study. Scale bar, 1 μm.
Distribution of NET substrates on the ONM and INM.
| WT LBR | 0.53:1 | 2.6±0.8 | 1.9±0.6 | 0.58:1 | 61±6% (overall) | 3.1:1 |
| 81±6% (INM) | ||||||
| LBRΔ63–172 | 0.30:1 | 1.1±0.3 | 1.0±0.4 | 0.30:1 | 37±8% (overall) | 1.1:1 |
| 72±8% (INM) | ||||||
| NET51 | 0.28:1 | 2.0±0.6 | 1.8±0.7 | 0.29:1 | 12±8% (overall) | 0.47:1 |
| 38±8% (INM) | ||||||
| Nesprin-3α | 0.10:1 | 1.2±0.5 | 0.9±0.4 | 0.10:1 | 61±7% (overall) | 0.04:1 |
| 61±7% (ONM) |
FRAP, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching; INM, inner nuclear membrane; NE, nuclear envelope; NET, NE transmembrane proteins; ONM, outer nuclear membrane; WT LBR, wild-type lamin B receptor.
In the column of ‘Immobilized fraction', ‘overall' refers the immobilized fraction of NETs on the NE and ‘INM' represents the immobilized fraction of NETs on the INM (using the formulae included in the figure caption of Supplementary Fig. 6). Both single-molecule and bulk FRAP measurements were repeated in at least ten different live cells. Data are mean±s.e. of the mean.