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PBio/NeuBehav 550: Biophysics of Ca2+ signaling Week 4 (05/18/15) Genetically expressible probes and FRET Objectives for today: • Why targeted and expressible probes • Aequorin & GFP mixed with theory • FRET Theory and photochemistry • The first cameleons and GcAMPs • Discuss a GCaMP paper Standard tools for calcium studies The original Ca/Mg chelator & buffer EDTA (1946) EGTA (1955) [NP-EGTA] [–—NP] Ca-selective chelator & buffer slow, pH sensitive [Caged calcium] Ca Green Roger Tsien’s fast buffers & fluorescent indicators Fluo KCa ~ 80-300 nM BAPTA (1980) Fura, Indo Advantages of proteins as indicators Highly evolved binding sites Can be further engineered by mutation Sophisticated optical properties Expressed by transfection, infection, transgenic; made within cells; no loading; do not leak Targetable: by promoters to specific cell types at specific times in organisms by localization sequence's: to subcellular locations and organelles in cells Sequnce targeting of fluorescent constructs Targeted to: cytoplasm N fluorescent protein C ER CRsig fluorescent protein KDEL tpA fluorescent protein secretory granules nucleus mitochondria fluorescent protein COX8 nls fluorescent protein Abbreviations: CRsig = calreticulin signal sequence KDEL = ER retention signal tpA = tissue plaminogen activator (a secreted protein) nls = nuclear localization signal COX8 = cytochrome oxidase N-terminus Targeted fluorescent proteins YC2 scales = "10 mm" nuGFP and mtBFP YC3er (Miyawaki et al. & Tsien, Nature, 1997) (Ruzzuto et al. & Tsien, Nature, 1996) Fluorescent proteins make Aequorea glow at 508 nm The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2008. Osamu Shimomura, Martin Chalfie, Roger Y. Tsien Green fluorescent ring ---Shimomura O, Johnson FH, Saiga Y, 1962, Extraction, purification and properties of Aequorin, a bioluminescent protein from the luminous hydromedusan, Aequorea. J. Cell. Comp. Physiol., 59: 223-239. [470 nm] Aequorea victoria from Puget Sound in brightfield and false color ---R.Y. Tsien, 1998, The Green Fluorescent Protein, Annual Review of Biochemistry 67, pp 509-544. [508 nm] Aequorin: a bioluminescent Ca2+ binding protein complex containing coelenterazine coelenterazine M.W. = 22,514 with four E/F hands Aequorin (Aeq) falls in the general heading of "luciferases" that bind a "luciferin" and luminesce in response to a ligand. (The most famous of these is firefly luciferase that can be used to measure ATP concentrations.) Reaction: Aeq + coelenterazine ----> Aeq.c [non-covalent complex] Aeq.c + ~3 Ca2+ Ca3.Aeq.c* ----> Ca3.Aeq.c* + CO2 -----> Ca3.Aeq.c** + [blue photon--470 nm] Aequorin is therefore a one-shot calcium detector with a non-linear Ca2+ dependence of luminescence. It is "consumed" by a detection event. Why are so few proteins fluorescent? Tyrosine/ phenol: Fluo-4 emit 516 nm Excit. 275 nm, emit 310 nm) coelenterazine emit 470 nm napthalene anthracene "Particle-in-a-box" (think organ pipes) absorption spectra UV small box, short wave large box, long wave tetracene visible GFP (238 aa): generates fluorescent chromophore from its amino acids autocatalytically Y66 G67 Y66 Maturation can be slow Engineer codons folding color photoconversion M.W. = 26,938 G67 dehydration N C GFP, a beta barrel Engineering color in GFPs Excitation spectra 5 4 5 400 500 Absorbance Fluorescence intensity 4 Emission spectra 300 400 500 wavelength (nm) 600 600 700 wavelength (nm) Roger Tsien's lab made a range of GFP-derived proteins of different colors by mutation of the expression vector. Absorption and fluorescence spectra reflect internal energy levels S1 S1 S0 S0 ground state Absorption wavelength Em wl Jablonski diagram Absorber has several electronic states (S0, S1, S2, etc.). It also has vibrational states whose close spacing means that photons of a range of close energies can be absorbed. If the absorption spectrum has a second peak (at shorter wavelength), it is for excitation to S2 or because the dye has several molecular forms/conformations. Förster/Fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET): A proximity detector (molecular ruler) that changes color 440 nm 480 nm hn emission hn Separated: excitation no FRET 440 nm Close together: FRET YFP CFP hn excitation no 440 nm excitation no hn CFP FRET! YFP hn 535 nm emission Green fluorescent protein (GFP) has been engineered to make forms with various fluorescent colors (GFP, CFP, YFP, …). They have overlapping spectra and can transfer excitation directly by FRET when the proteins are close together. The energy transfer occurs without a photon. FRET depends steeply on distance. R depends on overlap. Donor Acceptor 440 nm CFP FRET! YFP excitation r Transfer efficiency E: 535 nm emission R o6 E = ------------R o6 + r 6 fD eA Förster formula for Förster radius Ro Ro = Const. {fdon k2 J n –4} 1/6 Where fdon quantum efficiency of donor k orientation factor (0 – 4) n local refractive index 500 600 J "overlap integral" of donor fluorescence (fD) and acceptor absorption eA J= l = wavelength FRET as a ‘Spectroscopic Ruler’ The efficiency of energy transfer is proportional to the inverse of the sixth power of the distance separating the donor and acceptor fluorophore ECFP/EYFP Förster distance 30 Å Förster distance 50 Å e.g., ECFP/EYFP Förster distance 70 Å E % decreases with the distance between donor and acceptor Two fluorophores separated by Förster distance (r = Ro) have E transfer of 50% More steps in the Jablonski diagram internal conversion (1 ps) (polar) solvent relaxation (100 ps) competition for re-radiation, quench, FRET, or other nonradiative (3 ns) absorption (1 fs) knr fluorescence Donor hnFRET quench FRET Acceptor FRET speeds donor F and slows acceptor F competition for re-radiation, quench, FRET (polar) solvent relaxation (100 ps) internal conversion (1 ps) absorption (1 fs) emission intensity Donor knr fluorescence CFP hnFRET quench Acceptor FRET YFP Ca2+-bound CaMeleon 530 nm from EYFP by FRET 480 nm from ECFP 0 2 time (ns) 4 Fluorescence lifetime imaging is a 6 way to image FRET Fluorescence decays recorded with YC3.1 cameleon dissolved in buffer. Excitation at 420 nm excites the ECFP part. (Habuchi et al. Biophys J, 2002) A family of Ca2+-sensitive switches and buffers helix-loophelix makes E-F hand x x x x Calmodulin MW ~ 17 kDa KCa ~ 14 mM for free calmodulin Calmodulin (CaM) : An abundant 149 amino acid, highly conserved cytoplasmic protein with 4 binding sites for Ca2+ each formed by "EF-hands." Many other homologous Ca2+ binding proteins of this large EF-hand family act as Ca switches and Ca buffers. The Ca2+ ions bind cooperatively and become encircled by oxygen dipoles and negative charge. CaM complexes with many proteins, imparting Ca2+-dependence to their activities. Calmodulin folds around a target helix M13: MLCK peptide 4 Ca CaM Binding of Ca2+ to CaM causes CaM to change conformation. Binding of CaM to targets can increase the Ca2+ binding affinity of CaM greatly. The target peptide in this crystal structure is the regulatory domain of smooth-muscle myosin light-chain kinase (MLCK). The interaction of CaM and MLCK allows smooth muscle contraction to be activated in a Ca2+-dependent manner. (Meador WE, Means AR & Quiocho, 1992.) Design of CaMeleons: Expressible proteins for Ca detection 440 nm Low calcium: No FRET 480 nm YFP C N CaM MLCK CFP C 440 nm CFP High calcium: FRET N FRET YFP 535 nm Two GFPs in one peptide interact by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). Targeting sequences can be added to direct constructs to specific compartments. (Miyawaki, Roger Tsien et al., 1997) Ca-sensitive cameleon emission spectra Note two peaks no Ca emission intensity Ca YC3.1 cameleon more FRET Emission wavelength (nm) (Miyawaki, Roger Tsien et al., 1997) Ca-sensitive FRET reporter. How do calciums bind? (Miyawaki et al., 1997) green cameleon 1 fluorescence ratios 510/445 nm emission ratio 1.0 E104 C lower affinity E31 N higher affinity GC1 GC1/E31Q GC1/E104Q free calcium (M) Calcium binding and the conformation change can be tailored by making mutations in the EF hand regions of the calmodulin. Glutamate E31 is in the first EF hand (at p12') and E104 is in the third EF hand (also at p12'). ER-directed Cameleon sees stores SERCA inhibition PLC activation Caex PC12 cells are transfected with D1-ER, a Roger Tsien cameleon directed to the ER. SERCA pump blocker BHQ shows efflux,. ATP makes IP3 production and calcium release from ER. (Dickson,....,Hille, 2012) GCaMP! circ. permute n-ABCD-c n-BCDA-c n-CDAB-c n-DABC-c Ca M13 CaM LL Looger 2013 Fig. 3 M13 Ca LL Looger 2012 Fig. 1 CaM GCaMP descendants RCaMP1h First generation (2001) was slow, green, and pH dependent. Keeps getting better, brighter, faster, more colors. LL Looger Front Mol Neurosci. 2013 Mao T, O'Connor DH, Scheuss V, Nakai J, Svoboda K. Characterization and subcellular targeting of GCaMPtype genetically-encoded calcium indicators. PLoS One. 2008 Mar 19;3(3):e1796. Each figure will be described by a student--as if you are teaching it to us for the first time. Further questions will come from the audience. --5 min per fig--one panel at a time --give it a title --explain axes and subject --ask leading questions to get students to discuss--what is being tested and what is concluded? 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett Svoboda Fig. 1 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett Svoboda Fig. 2 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett Svoboda Fig. 3A 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett Svoboda Fig. 3B 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett Svoboda Fig. 4D 1 Liza Kobelt 2 Brian Schmidt 3A Kelly Duong 3B Michelle Gianmarco 4D Sarah Pickett