光漂白后的x射线光子相关光谱、显微镜和荧光恢复研究朊病毒蛋白凝聚物的相分离和液固转变。

IF 1 Q3 BIOLOGY
Mariana J do Amaral, Aline R Passos, Satabdee Mohapatra, Maria Heloisa Freire, Susanne Wegmann, Yraima Cordeiro
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引用次数: 0

摘要

生物分子凝聚物是由具有内在无序区和rna结合能力的蛋白质与核酸组成的大分子组合物。这些通过液-液相分离(LLPS)形成的区室提供了关键细胞过程的时空控制,如RNA代谢。类液体状态是动态可逆的,含有高度扩散的分子,而凝胶,玻璃和固相可能由于强分子间交联而不可逆。神经变性相关蛋白,如朊蛋白(PrP)和Tau形成液体状凝聚体,在基因突变和/或持续的细胞应激下转变为凝胶或固体状结构。越来越多的证据表明,向较低动态状态的进展是神经毒性聚集体形成的基础。通过测量凝析物在不同时间尺度上的运动来了解凝析物中蛋白质和生物分子的动力学是表征其物质状态和评估LLPS动力学的必要条件。在这里,我们描述了蛋白在大肠杆菌中的表达和纯化全长小鼠重组PrP,我们的体外实验系统。然后,我们描述了一种用x射线光子相关光谱(XPCS)分析蛋白质凝聚体动力学的系统方法。我们还提出了光漂白后荧光恢复(FRAP)优化的方案来表征冷凝物,包括细胞内的冷凝物。接下来,我们详细介绍了使用荧光显微镜来深入了解凝聚物中蛋白质的折叠状态的策略。分相系统显示非平衡行为,长度尺度从纳米到微米,时间尺度从微秒到分钟。XPCS实验为生物分子动力学和凝析液流动性提供了独特的见解。结合使用本文详细介绍的三种策略,可以对生物物理特性和蛋白质相分离状态的性质进行稳健的表征。•对于细胞中的FRAP,我们建议使用旋转盘共聚焦显微镜,配合温度和CO2培养箱。•对于荧光显微镜,我们建议同时成像微分干涉对比(DIC)(或相衬)和荧光通道,以获得相分离结构的形态学细节。•对于XPCS,需要相干x射线光束,第四和第三同步加速器光源中的快速x射线探测器和x射线自由电子激光器。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
X-Ray Photon Correlation Spectroscopy, Microscopy, and Fluorescence Recovery After Photobleaching to Study Phase Separation and Liquid-to-Solid Transition of Prion Protein Condensates.

Biomolecular condensates are macromolecular assemblies constituted of proteins that possess intrinsically disordered regions and RNA-binding ability together with nucleic acids. These compartments formed via liquid-liquid phase separation (LLPS) provide spatiotemporal control of crucial cellular processes such as RNA metabolism. The liquid-like state is dynamic and reversible, containing highly diffusible molecules, whereas gel, glass, and solid phases might not be reversible due to the strong intermolecular crosslinks. Neurodegeneration-associated proteins such as the prion protein (PrP) and Tau form liquid-like condensates that transition to gel- or solid-like structures upon genetic mutations and/or persistent cellular stress. Mounting evidence suggests that progression to a less dynamic state underlies the formation of neurotoxic aggregates. Understanding the dynamics of proteins and biomolecules in condensates by measuring their movement in different timescales is indispensable to characterize their material state and assess the kinetics of LLPS. Herein, we describe protein expression in E. coli and purification of full-length mouse recombinant PrP, our in vitro experimental system. Then, we describe a systematic method to analyze the dynamics of protein condensates by X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS). We also present fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP)-optimized protocols to characterize condensates, including in cells. Next, we detail strategies for using fluorescence microscopy to give insights into the folding state of proteins in condensates. Phase-separated systems display non-equilibrium behavior with length scales ranging from nanometers to microns and timescales from microseconds to minutes. XPCS experiments provide unique insights into biomolecular dynamics and condensate fluidity. Using the combination of the three strategies detailed herein enables robust characterization of the biophysical properties and the nature of protein phase-separated states. Key features • For FRAP in cells, we recommend using a spinning disk confocal microscope coupled with temperature and CO2 incubator. • For fluorescence microscopy, we recommend simultaneously imaging differential interference contrast (DIC) (or phase contrast) and fluorescence channels to obtain morphological details of phase-separated structures. • For XPCS, coherent X-ray beams, fast X-ray detectors in fourth and third synchrotron light sources, and X-ray free-electron lasers are required.

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