Genetically Encoding Quinoline Reverses Chromophore Charge and Enables Fluorescent Protein Brightening in Acidic Vesicles

2018 
Acidic vesicles and organelles play fundamental roles in a broad range of cellular events such as endocytosis, lysosomal degradation, synaptic transmission, pathogen fate, and drug delivery. Fluorescent reporters will be invaluable for studying these complex and multifunctional systems with spatiotemporal resolution, yet common fluorescent proteins are generally nonfluorescent at acidic conditions due to the decrease of anionic chromophores upon protonation, but are fluorescent at physiological pH, creating interfering fluorescence from nonvesicle regions. Here we developed a novel acid-brightening fluorescent protein (abFP) that fluoresces strongly at acidic pH but is nonfluorescent at or above neutral pH, boasting a pH profile opposite to that of common fluorescent proteins. Through expansion of the genetic code, we incorporated a quinoline-containing amino acid Qui into the chromophore of EGFP to reverse the chromophore charge. Protonation of Qui rendered a cationic chromophore, which resulted in uniqu...
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    38
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []