| Literature DB >> 28252043 |
Hanyang Hu1,2,3, Yanfang Gu1,2,3, Lei Xu1,2, Yejun Zou1,2,3, Aoxue Wang1,2,3, Rongkun Tao1,2,3, Xianjun Chen1,2,3, Yuzheng Zhao1,2,3, Yi Yang1,2.
Abstract
High-resolution spatiotemporal imaging of histidine in single living mammalian cells faces technical challenges. Here, we developed a series of ratiometric, highly responsive, and single fluorescent protein-based histidine sensors of wide dynamic range. We used these sensors to quantify subcellular free-histidine concentrations in glucose-deprived cells and glucose-fed cells. Results showed that cytosolic free-histidine concentration was higher and more sensitive to the environment than free histidine in the mitochondria. Moreover, histidine was readily transported across the plasma membrane and mitochondrial inner membrane, which had almost similar transport rates and transport constants, and histidine transport was not influenced by cellular metabolic state. These sensors are potential tools for tracking histidine dynamics inside subcellular organelles, and they will open an avenue to explore complex histidine signaling.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28252043 PMCID: PMC5333150 DOI: 10.1038/srep43479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Generation of cpYFP-based histidine indicators.
(a) Conformation of HisJ changes upon histidine binding. Crystallographic structures of histidine-free and histidine-binding HisJ based on Protein Data Bank files 2M8C and 1HSL. Histidine is indicated in ball form (green and red). The rainbow ribbon parts (residues 185–193) represent the flexible and target regions for the insertion of cpYFP to generate histidine sensors. (b) Design of histidine indicators. The fluorescence of cpYFP is highly sensitive to the conformational changes induced by histidine. (c) The 36 chimeras, in which cpYFP was inserted into the flexible linker 185–193 region of HisJ, and their fluorescence response towards 100 mM histidine. (d) Schematic model (left) and titration curves (right) for seven histidine indicators. Fluorescence ratios were normalized to the control condition in the absence of histidine. For (d), data are presented three biological replicates, and error bars represent SEM.
Properties of histidine sensors.
| Insertion site | Sensor name | Detection mode (fluorescent protein) | Dynamic range (%) | Detection range (μM) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 186/191 | FHisJ4.0μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 4.0 | 260 | 0.16–100 |
| 187/191 | FHisJ13μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 13 | 280 | 0.5–350 |
| 189/190 | FHisJ2.4μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 2.4 | 320 | 0.1–70 |
| 189/191 | FHisJ21μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 21 | 360 | 0.6–730 |
| 189/193 | FHisJ3.4μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 3.4 | 240 | 0.15–80 |
| 190/193 | FHisJ3.2μ | Ratiometric (cpYFP) | 3.2 | 280 | 0.1–80 |
Figure 2In vitro Properties of FHisJ Sensor.
(a) Excitation spectra of purified FHisJ sensor in the control condition (dark red) and after addition of 1 mM histidine (orange), which was normalized to the peak intensity in the presence of 1 mM histidine. Emission was measured at 530 nm. (b) Fluorescence intensities of FHisJ with excitation at 420 or 485 nm in the presence of different concentrations of histidine and emission at 528 nm. Data were normalized to the initial value. (c) The ratio of fluorescence intensities with excitation at 485 nm divided by 420 nm (R485/420) in the presence of different concentrations of histidine and its analogs (other 19 amino acids and histamine). (d) Fluorescence intensities of FHisJ and cpYFP with excitation at 420 or 485 nm and emission at 528 nm at the indicated pH. Data normalized to the fluorescence at pH 7.4. (e) Fluorescence intensity of FHisJ when excited at 420 nm plotted against the histidine concentration at the indicated pH. (f) Histidine titration curves of FHisJ at the indicated pH. Fluorescence ratios were normalized to the control condition in the absence of histidine. For (b–f), data are presented three biological replicates, error bars represent SEM (see also Supplementary Figure 1).
Figure 3Subcellular Distribution of Histidine in Mammalian Cells.
(a) Fluorescence images of FHisJ sensor targeted to cytosol (top) and mitochondria (bottom). Scale bar, 10 μm. (b) Normalized ratio of FHisJ and FHisJ-Mit fluorescence excited at 485 nm to that at 420 nm in glucose-deprived or glucose-fed cells and measured in vitro with a fluorescence plate reader in the presence or absence of 1 mM histidine. Cells were deprived of glucose for 2 h. Error bars represent SD. (c) Quantification of cytosolic and mitochondrial free-histidine level in glucose-deprived or glucose-fed cells according to the FHisJ and FHisJ-Mit fluorescence data in Fig. 3b. *p < 0.05, and ***p < 0.001. For (b and c), data are presented three biological replicates, and error bars represent SD.
Figure 4Subcellular Transport of Histidine in Mammalian Cells.
(a and b) Kinetics of FHisJ (a) and FHisJ-Mit (b) fluorescence responses in Hela cells treated with exogenous histidine. (c) Fluorescence responses of FHisJ and FHisJ-Mit in Hela cells after histidine addition for 8 min. (d and e) Spatiotemporally resolved changes in the ratiometric fluorescence of FHisJ (d, top), cpYFP (d, bottom), FHisJ-Mit (e, top), and cpYFP-Mit (e, bottom) in sequential frames (left to right, 2 min/frame) in response to 1 mM histidine in Hela cells. Images were pseudocolored with the ratio of fluorescence excited at 482 and 407 nm. Scale bar, 10 μm. For (a–e), cells were starved in HBSS for 2 h. (f) Effect of different nutrients on histidine transport across plasma membrane. Cells expressing FHisJ were incubated with or without indicated nutrients for 2 h and then treated with 1 mM histidine. (g) Effect of glycolysis inhibitors and mitochondtial inhibitor on histidine transport across plasma membrane. Cells were treated with inhibitors for 30 min. (h) Effect of different nutrients, glycolysis inhibitors, and mitochondrial inhibitor on cytosolic metabolic state assessed by SoNar sensor. Experimental condition was the same as those of (f and g). ***p < 0.001. For (a–c, f and g), FHisJ or FHisJ-Mit fluorescence were corrected for pH effect by normalization with cpYFP or cpYFP-Mit fluorescence measured in parallel experiments. For (a–c and f–h), data are presented three (a–c, f and g) or six (h) biological replicates, error bars represent SEM. (see also Supplementary Figure 2).