首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     检索      


A Molecular Chameleon for Mapping Subcellular Polarity in an Unfolded Proteome Environment
Authors:Tze Cin Owyong  Pramod Subedi  Jieru Deng  Elizabeth Hinde  Jason J Paxman  Jonathan M White  Weisan Chen  Begoa Heras  Wallace W H Wong  Yuning Hong
Institution:Tze Cin Owyong,Pramod Subedi,Jieru Deng,Elizabeth Hinde,Jason J. Paxman,Jonathan M. White,Weisan Chen,Begoña Heras,Wallace W. H. Wong,Yuning Hong
Abstract:Environmental polarity is an important factor that drives biomolecular interactions to regulate cell function. Herein, a general method of using the fluorogenic probe NTPAN‐MI is reported to quantify the subcellular polarity change in response to protein unfolding. NTPAN‐MI fluorescence is selectively activated upon labeling unfolded proteins with exposed thiols, thereby reporting on the extent of proteostasis. NTPAN‐MI also reveals the collapse of the host proteome caused by influenza A virus infection. The emission profile of NTPAN‐MI contains information of the local polarity of the unfolded proteome, which can be resolved through spectral phasor analysis. Under stress conditions that disrupt different checkpoints of protein quality control, distinct patterns of dielectric constant distribution in the cytoplasm can be observed. However, in the nucleus, the unfolded proteome was found to experience a more hydrophilic environment across all the stress conditions, indicating the central role of nucleus in the stress response process.
Keywords:aggregation-induced emission  fluorescence  proteins  proteostasis  solvatochromism
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号