| Literature DB >> 34040747 |
Konstantin S Mineev1,2, Sergey A Goncharuk1,2, Marina V Goncharuk1, Natalia V Povarova1, Anatolii I Sokolov1, Nadezhda S Baleeva1, Alexander Yu Smirnov1, Ivan N Myasnyanko1, Dmitry A Ruchkin1, Sergey Bukhdruker2,3,4,5, Alina Remeeva2, Alexey Mishin2, Valentin Borshchevskiy2,3,4, Valentin Gordeliy2,3,4,6, Alexander S Arseniev1, Dmitriy A Gorbachev1, Alexey S Gavrikov1, Alexander S Mishin1, Mikhail S Baranov1,7.
Abstract
One of the essential characteristics of any tag used in bioscience and medical applications is its size. The larger the label, the more it may affect the studied object, and the more it may distort its behavior. In this paper, using NMR spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography, we have studied the structure of fluorogen-activating protein FAST both in the apo form and in complex with the fluorogen. We showed that significant change in the protein occurs upon interaction with the ligand. While the protein is completely ordered in the complex, its apo form is characterized by higher mobility and disordering of its N-terminus. We used structural information to design the shortened FAST (which we named nanoFAST) by truncating 26 N-terminal residues. Thus, we created the shortest genetically encoded tag among all known fluorescent and fluorogen-activating proteins, which is composed of only 98 amino acids. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040747 PMCID: PMC8132994 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc01454d
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Optical properties of various FAPs and FPs
| FP of FAP | Size, kDa | Absorbance maxima position, nm | Emission maxima position, nm |
| Fluorescence quantum yield (FQY), % | Brightness (= |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| GFP[ | 26.9 | 488 | 507 | 55 900 | 60 | 33 500 | — |
| mNeonGreen[ | 26.6 | 506 | 517 | 116 000 | 80 | 92 800 | — |
| mOrange2 (ref. | 26.8 | 549 | 565 | 58 000 | 60 | 34 800 | — |
| mFAP1:DFHBI[ | 12.2 | 485 | 506 | 49 300 | 2.1 | 1000 | 0.56 |
| L5-MG:MG-2p[ | 11.5 | 640 | 668 | 103 000 | 4.8 | 5000 | 0.32 |
| DiB1 (ref. | 19.7 | 513 | 542 | 45 800 | 32 | 14 650 | 0.1 |
| FAST: | 13.6 | 483 | 540 | 45 000 | 33 | 14 850 | 0.13 |
| FAST: | 13.6 | 520 | 600 | 39 000 | 31 | 12 000 | 0.97 |
| FAST: | 13.6 | 562 | 606 | 23 000 | 25 | 5750 | 0.25 |
| FAST: | 13.6 | 510 | 566 | 30 500 | 54 ± 3 | 16 500 | 0.021 ± 0.002 |
| nanoFAST: | 10.8 | 502 | 563 | 25 500 | 56 ± 3 | 14 300 | 0.85 ± 0.05 |
Fig. 4Principal scheme of FAST protein action revealed by NMR analysis, proposed nanoFAST protein and their fluorogens.
Fig. 1Crystal structure of FAST in the domain-swapped dimer form.
Fig. 23D structure of FAST-apo (A and B left, superposition on C) and FAST:N871b complex (A and B right, superposition on C). (A) 20 best NMR structures, superimposed over the backbone atoms of the secondary structure elements. N-terminus and region 43–50 that change the structure upon ligand binding are shown in ivory. (B) Representative structures. α-Helices are shown in green and β-strands are shown in blue. N-terminus and region 43–50 are highlighted by orange and magenta, respectively. (C) Structures of FAST-apo (green) and FAST:N871b (blue), superimposed over the backbone atoms of 5 β-strands and helix H5. Unstructured C-terminal His6 tag is not shown.
Fig. 3Details of the N871b binding by FAST. (A) Hydrogen bonds involved in N871b binding. (B) A low-field region of 1H NMR spectra of FAST in the apo state (red) and in complex with N871b (blue). Both spectra were recorded at pH 7.0, 25 °C. The assignment of protons is indicated. (C) Non-bonding interactions, detected within the FAST:N871b complex. Sidechains of hydrophobic residues are painted in orange, R52 positively charged sidechain is shown in blue.
Fig. 5The absorption (dashed lines) and emission (solid line) spectra of free fluorogens (grey) and protein : fluorogen complexes (colored). The ratio of the absorption intensity of the complex and free fluorogen corresponds to the real change in the extinction coefficient and shape of the spectra in PBS. The curves are from a single measurement.
Fig. 6Performance of fluorogenic complex of nanoFAST with HBR-DOM2 in fluorescence microscopy. Fluorescence imaging of live U2OS cells transiently transfected with (A) lifeact-nanoFAST and live HeLa cells transiently transfected (B) 3 × NLS-nanoFAST, (C) vimentin-nanoFAST and (D) H2B-nanoFAST constructs in the presence of 5 μM HBR-DOM2; scale bars are 10 μm. (E) Photobleaching of nanoFAST in the presence of 30 μM HBR-DOM2 in comparison with mNeonGreen under confocal microscopy conditions. Solid lines represent mean value ± SD (shaded, n = 10 nuclei for each construct) (F) sequential staining and washout of live HeLa cells transiently transfected with H2B-nanoFAST construct; 5 μM concentration of HBR-DOM2 was used for staining; solid line – mean value ± SD (shaded, n = 4 nuclei) individual frames of single labeled nuclei from timings indicated by numbered blue squares presented on panel (G); scale bars are 5 μm.