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A Diverse Selection of Organelle Probes—Section 12.1 Molecular Probes offers a diverse array of cell-permeant fluorescent stains that selectively associate with the mitochondria, lysosomes, endoplasmic reticulum and Golgi apparatus in live cells. These probes, which include our exclusive MitoTracker, MitoFluor, LysoTracker, LysoSensor, RedoxSensor and ER-Tracker organelle stains (Molecular Probes' organelle-selective probes—Table 12.1, Figure 12.1), are compatible with most fluorescence instrumentation and provide researchers with powerful tools for investigating respiration, mitosis, apoptosis, multidrug resistance, substrate degradation and detoxification, intracellular transport and sorting and more. Moreover, unlike antibodies, these fluorescent probes can be used to investigate organelle structure and activity in live cells with minimal disruption of cellular function ( ). The red-fluorescent organelle stains are particularly useful for demonstrating colocalization with green-fluorescent protein (GFP) expression (Fluorescent Probes for Use with GFP—Note 12.1). An excellent compendium of human diseases that affect intracellular transport processes through lysosomes, Golgi apparatus and endoplasmic reticulum has been published. A particularly useful general review of cell organelles and other topics appears at the Cell Biology Topics web site (http://cellbio.utmb.edu/cellbio/). Figure 12.1 Diagram of an animal cell. We have also introduced a large collection of organelle-specific monoclonal antibodies for both mammalian and yeast cells that can be used for immunolocalization, immunoprecipitation and Western blot analysis. Our antibodies to mitochondrial proteins (Monoclonal antibodies specific for proteins in the oxidative phosphorylation system—Table 12.4, Monoclonal antibodies specific for mitochondrial proteins not associated with the oxidative phosphorylation system—Table 12.6, Figure 12.33) provide a unique set of tools for understanding the assembly and function of mitochondria. Cell-permeant and -impermeant fluorescent stains for the nucleus are described in Nucleic Acid Detection and Genomics Technology—Chapter 8, probes for the cytoskeleton in Probes for Cytoskeletal Proteins—Chapter 11, and plasma membrane stains in Probes for Lipids and Membranes—Chapter 13. A variety of probes for phagovacuoles, endosomes and lysosomes—including membrane markers as well as ligands for studying receptormediated endocytosis—are discussed in Probes for Following Receptor Binding, Endocytosis and Exocytosis—Section 16.1. Figure 12.33. Major protein complexes of the oxidative phosphorylation (OxPhos) system and antibodies that recognize them. Molecular Probes' organelle-selective probes - Table 12.1 Probes for Mitochondria — Probes for Mitochondria - Section 12.2 Chemiluminescent Probe L6868 Lucigenin † Green-Fluorescent Probes A1372 Nonyl acridine orange D273 DiOC6(3) D378 DiOC7(3) (for plant mitochondria) M7502 MitoFluor Green M7514 MitoTracker Green FM * R302, R22420 Rhodamine 123 S7529 SYTO 18 yeast mitochondrial stain T3168 JC-1 ‡ D22421 JC-9 ‡ Yellow- and Orange-Fluorescent Probes D288 4-Di-1-ASP (DASPMI) D426 DASPEI M7510 MitoTracker Orange CMTMRos * R634 Rhodamine 6G R648MP Rhodamine B, hexyl ester T639 Tetramethylrosamine T668 Tetramethylrhodamine, methyl ester T669 Tetramethylrhodamine, ethyl ester Red-Fluorescent Probes M7512 MitoTracker Red CMXRos * T3168 JC-1 ‡ D22421 JC-9 ‡ M22425 MitoTracker Red 580 * M22424 MitoFluor Red 589 M22422 MitoFluor Red 594 M22426 MitoTracker Deep Red 633 * * Aldehyde-fixable probe. † Chemiluminescent probe. ‡ Dual-emission spectrum. Probes for Mitochondria (Probes Requiring Intracellular Oxidation) — Probes for Mitochondria - Section 12.2 Green-Fluorescent Probe D632 Dihydrorhodamine 123 Yellow- and Orange-Fluorescent Probes D633 Dihydrorhodamine 6G M7511 MitoTracker Orange CM-H2TMRos * Red-Fluorescent Probes M7513 MitoTracker Red CM-H2XRos * R14060 RedoxSensor Red CC-1 † * Aldehyde-fixable probe. † The differential distribution of the oxidized product between mitochondria and lysosomes appears to depend on the oxidation–reduction (redox) potential of the cytosol. Probes for Acidic Organelles, Including Lysosomes — Probes for Lysosomes, Peroxisomes and Yeast Vacuoles - Section 12.3 Blue-Fluorescent and Nonfluorescent Probes D1552 DAMP * H22845 Hydroxystilbamidine † L7525 LysoTracker Blue DND-22 † L12490 LysoTracker Blue-White DPX Green-Fluorescent Probe L7526 LysoTracker Green DND-26 Yellow- and Orange-Fluorescent Probes D113 Dansyl cadaverine L12491 LysoTracker Yellow HCK-123 Red-Fluorescent Probes L7528 LysoTracker Red DND-99 R14060 RedoxSensor Red CC-1 ‡ * Nonfluorescent probe. † Blue-fluorescent probe. ‡ The differential distribution of the oxidized product between mitochondria and lysosomes appears to depend on the redox potential of the cytosol. Probes for Acidic Organelles, Including Lysosomes (pH-Sensitive Probes) — Probes for Lysosomes, Peroxisomes and Yeast Vacuoles - Section 12.3 Blue-Fluorescent Probes L7533 LysoSensor Blue DND-167 L7545 LysoSensor Yellow/Blue DND-160 * L22460LysoSensor Yellow/Blue 10,000 MW dextran * Green-Fluorescent Probes L7534 LysoSensor Green DND-153 L7535 LysoSensor Green DND-189 Yellow- and Orange-Fluorescent Probes A1301 Acridine orange L7545 LysoSensor Yellow/Blue DND-160 * L22460LysoSensor Yellow/Blue 10,000 MW dextran * Red-Fluorescent Probe N3246 Neutral red * Dual-emission spectrum. Probes for the Endoplasmic Reticulum — Probes for the Endoplasmic Reticulum and Golgi Apparatus - Section 12.4 Blue-Fluorescent Probe E12353 ER-Tracker Blue-White DPX Green-Fluorescent Probes B7447 BODIPY FL brefeldin A D272 DiOC5(3) D273 DiOC6(3) Yellow- and Orange-Fluorescent Probes B7449 BODIPY 558/568 brefeldin A D282 DiIC18(3) D384 DiIC16(3) R648MPRhodamine B, hexyl ester R634 Rhodamine 6G T668 Tetramethylrhodamine, methyl ester T669 Tetramethylrhodamine, ethyl ester Probes for the Golgi Apparatus — Probes for the Endoplasmic Reticulum and Golgi Apparatus - Section 12.4 Nonfluorescent Probe B7450 Brefeldin A Green-Fluorescent Probes B7447 BODIPY FL brefeldin A D3521 BODIPY FL C5-ceramide * B22650 BODIPY FL C5-ceramide complexed to BSA * D3522 BODIPY FL C5-sphingomyelin N1154 NBD C6-ceramide N22651NBD C6-ceramide complexed to BSA N3524 NBD C6-sphingomyelin Orange-Fluorescent Probe B7449 BODIPY 558/568 brefeldin A Red-Fluorescent Probes D3521 BODIPY FL C5-ceramide * B22650 BODIPY FL C5-ceramide complexed to BSA * D7540 BODIPY TR ceramide * * Dual-emission spectrum. Fluorescent Probes for Use with GFP - Note 12.1 Probes for Multiplexed Detection of GFP-Expressing Cells The green-fluorescent protein (GFP) reporter has added a new dimension to the analysis of protein localization, allowing real-time examination in living cells of processes that have conventionally been observed through immunocytochemical "snapshots" in fixed specimens. Using other spectrally distinct probes and markers (Table 1) adds extra data dimensions and reference points to these experiments (Figure 1) Figure 1. The morphology of sporulating Bacillus subtilis in the early stages of forespore engulfment. The membranes and chromosomes of both the forespore and the larger mother cell are stained with FM 4-64 (red; T3166, T13320) and DAPI (blue; D1306, D3571, D21490), respectively. The small green-fluorescent patch indicates the localization of a GFP fusion to SPoIIIE, a protein essential for translocation of the forespore chromosome that may also regulate membrane fusion events (see Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96, 14553 (1999)). The background contains sporangia at various stages in the engulfment process stained with MitoTracker Green FM (green, M7514) and FM 4-64 (red). The majority of the applications summarized in Table 1 involve living cells, tissues and organisms. There are many other instances where research objectives call for complementary use of immunochemical and GFP-based protein localization techniques. These experiments demand the unmatched combination of brightness, photostability and spectral separation provided by our Alexa Fluor dye–labeled secondary detection reagents. For two-color combinations with GFP, we recommend our Alexa Fluor 555, Alexa Fluor 568 or Alexa Fluor 594 dye–labeled secondary antibodies (Secondary Immunoreagents - Section 7.2, Summary of Molecular Probes' secondary antibody conjugates - Table 7.1). For three-color detection, add Alexa Fluor 635 or Alexa Fluor 647 dye-labeled antibodies. Some immunohistochemical procedures such as paraffin embedding of fixed tissue result in loss of the intrinsic fluorescence of GFP. In other cases, GFP expression levels may simply be too low for detection above background autofluorescence. Antibodies to GFP provide remedies for these problems (Figure 2.. We offer unlabeled mouse monoclonal and rabbit polyclonal antibodies to GFP (A6455, A11120, A11121, A11122; Primary Antibodies for Diverse Applications - Section 7.5) as well as Alexa Fluor dye–labeled rabbit polyclonal antibodies to GFP (A21311, A21312, A31851, A31852; Primary Antibodies for Diverse Applications - Section 7.5). Figure 2. HeLa cell transfected with pShooter pCMV/myc/mito/GFP, then fixed and permeabilized. Green-fluorescent protein (GFP) localized in the mitochondria was labeled with mouse IgG2a anti-GFP antibody (A11120) and detected with orange-fluorescent Alexa Fluor 555 goat anti–mouse IgG antibody (A21422), which colocalized with the dim GFP fluorescence. F-actin was labeled with green-fluorescent Alexa Fluor 488 phalloidin (A12379), and the nucleus was stained with blue-fluorescent DAPI (D1306, D3571, D21490). The sample was mounted using ProLong Gold antifade reagent (P36930). Some GFP fluorescence is retained in the mitochondria after fixation (top), but immunolabeling and detection greatly improve visualization (bottom). Alexa Fluor Dyes — Highly Fluorescent FRET Acceptors Proximity-dependent fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) allows detection of protein–protein interactions with much higher spatial resolution than conventional diffraction-limited microscopy. Alexa Fluor dyes with strong absorption in the 500– 600 nm wavelength range are excellent FRET acceptors from GFP (Table 2). An assay to detect activation of GFP–GTPase fusions developed by researchers at Scripps Research Institute utilizes the GTPase-binding domain (PBD) of PAK1, a protein that binds to GTPases only in their activated GTP-bound form. GTPase activation is indicated by FRET from GFP to PDB labeled with Alexa Fluor 546 C5-maleimide at a single N-terminal cysteine residue. This assay has been used to determine the location and dynamics of rac and Cdc42 GTPase activation in living cells. Normalizing Expression and Translation Signals In 2002, researchers in Scott Fraser's laboratory at the California Institute of Technology reported a method of coinjecting Texas Red dye–labeled 10,000 MW dextran and GFP vectors into sea urchin embryos. This method overcomes a multitude of problems inherent in making intra- and inter-embryo comparisons of gene expression levels using confocal microscopy. In particular, laser excitation and fluorescence collection efficiencies vary with the depth of the fluorescent protein in the embryo, and the orientation of different embryos on the coverslip varies relative to the microscope objective. Measuring the ratio of Texas Red dextran and GFP fluorescence signals corrects for these spatial factors, providing a gene expression readout that is 2–50 times more accurate than conventional confocal microscopy procedures depending on the localization of GFP within an embryo. A similar strategy was previously used to determine translation efficiencies of GFP-encoding mRNAs. Table 1. Probes for multiplexed detection of GFP-expressing * cells. Target Probe Cat # Ex/Em GFP Fusion Partner Specimen Reference Physiological Indicators Intracellular Ca2+ Fura-2 AM F1201, F1221, F1225, F14185 335/505 Protein kinase C (PKC) BHK cells Biochem J 337 ( Pt 2), 211 (1999) Intracellular Ca2+ X-Rhod-1 AM X14210 580/602 Trpm5 580/602 (melastatin-related cation channel) CHO cells Nat Neurosci 5, 1169 (2002) Intracellular Ca2+ Fura Red AM F3020, F3021 GFP expressed Mouse pancreatic 488/650 specifically in pancreatic islets β-cells Human growth hormone RIN1046-38 (hGH) insulinoma cells Am J Physiol Endocrinol Metab 284, E177 (2003) Am J Physiol Cell Physiol 283, C429 (2002) Intracellular pH 5-(and 6-)Carboxy SNARF-1 C1271 AM ester acetate 568/635 Mitochondrial membrane potential TMRM T668 555/580 Cytochrome c MCF-7 human breast J Cell Sci 116, carcinoma, HeLa 525 (2003) Superoxide (O2–) Dihydroethidium D1168 518/605 Cytochrome c J Biol Chem MCF-7 human breast 278, 12645 carcinoma (2003) Synaptic activity FM 4-64 T3166, T13320 506/750 § VAMP (vesicle-associated Rat hippocampal membrane protein) neurons Nat Neurosci 3, 445 (2000) Rapsyn (receptoraggregating protein) J Neurosci 21, 5439 (2001) Receptors and Endocytosis Acetylcholine receptor Tetramethylrhodamine αbungarotoxin T1175 553/577 Epidermal growth factor (EGF) Rhodamine EGF E3481 555/581 EGF receptor Endosomes Transferrin from human serum, Alexa Fluor 546 conjugate T23364 556/573 Endosomes Transferrin from human serum, Alexa Fluor 568 conjugate T23365 PrPc (cellular prion 578/603 protein) β2-adrenergic receptor (β2AR) Zebrafish Mol Biol Cell MTLn3 rat mammary 11, 3873 adenocarcinoma (2000) HEK 293, rat Brain Res 984, hippocampal neurons 21 (2003) SN56 cells J Biol Chem 277, 33311 (2002) Endosomes FM 4-64 T3166, T13320 506/750 § PrPc (cellular prion protein) SN56 cells J Biol Chem 277, 33311 (2002) Organelles Endoplasmic reticulum ER-Tracker Blue-White DPX E12353 375/520 HSD17B7 gene product HeLa, NIH 3T3 (3-ketosteroid reductase) Mol Endocrinol 17, 1715 (2003) Golgi complex BODIPY TR ceramide 589/617 PrPc (cellular prion protein) J Biol Chem 277, 33311 (2002) Lysosomes Mitochondria Nuclear DNA Nuclear DNA D7540 SN56 cells L7528 577/590 Heparanase Primary human fibroblasts, MDA-231 Exp Cell Res (human breast 281, 50 (2002) carcinoma) MitoTracker Red M7512 Sam5p (mitochondrial 578/599 carrier for Sadenosylmethionine) Yeast (Saccharomyces EMBO J 22, cerevisiae) 5975 (2003) DAPI D1306, D3571, D21490 358/461 Histone H2B HeLa Methods 29, 42 (2003) Hoechst 33342 H1399, H3570, H21492 350/461 Histone H1 BALB/c 3T3 fibroblasts Nature 408, 877 (2000) HeLa J Biol Chem 278, 33528 (2003) LysoTracker Red Nuclear DNA SYTO 17 S7579 621/634 HIV-1 integrase Nuclear DNA SYTO 59 S11341 622/645 Nuclear DNA TO-PRO-3 T3605 642/661 Citron kinase HeLa J Cell Sci 114, 3273 (2001) DiI D282, D3911, N22880 549/565 Synaptobrevin Xenopus optic neurons Nat Neurosci 4, 1093 (2001) Human peripheral blood T cells (PBT) Nat Immunol 5, 272 (2004) NIH 3T3 J Cell Sci 113 Pt 21, 3725 (2000) Plasma membrane Microtubule plus-end binding protein Porcine kidney Mol Biol Cell epithelial cells (LLCPK) 14, 916 (2003) Other Subcellular Structures ERM (ezrin-radixinmoesin) proteins F-actin Rhodamine phalloidin R415 554/573 F-actin Alexa Fluor 568 phalloidin A12380 578/603 Calponin Lipid rafts Cholera toxin subunit B (recombinant), Alexa Fluor C22842 594 conjugate Histocompatibility NK cell–B-cell 590/617 leukocyte antigen (HLA)- immunological Cw4 synapse Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 98, 14547 (2001) GRASP65 (Golgi stacking HeLa protein) J Cell Biol 156, 495 (2002) Cell Classification Markers Annexin V, Alexa Fluor 594 A13203 conjugate 590/617 Transformed B lymphocytes (Raji cells) CellTracker Orange CMTMR C2927 ICAM-3 (intercellular 550/575 adhesion molecule-3) T-lymphocytes and Nat Immunol antigen-presenting B 3, 159 (2002) cells Cell-surface antigens R-Phycoerythrin (streptavidin conjugate) S866, S21388 565/575 GFP gene expression NIH 3T3 Neurons NeuroTrace 530/615 redfluorescent Nissl stain N21482 Tau microtubule-binding 530/620 protein (Purkinje cell Mouse brain slice marker) Neurons Alexa Fluor 594 hydrazide A10438, A10442 588/613 Synaptophysin Apoptotic cells Cytometry 25, 211 (1996) Aplysia californica sensory neurons J Neurosci 23, 6392 (2003) Neuron 40, 151 (2003) * This list covers only Aequoria victoria GFP, optimized mutants (e.g., EGFP) and green-fluorescent proteins from other species (e.g., Renilla reniformis). Fluorescent proteins with distinctly different excitation and emission characteristics (CFP, YFP, dsRed, etc.) are not included. Fluorescence excitation (Ex) and emission (Em) maxima, in nm. Simultaneous imaging of GFP with fura-2 or ER-Tracker Blue-White DPX requires excitation wavelength–switching capability, because the fluorescence emission spectra overlap extensively. Even under these conditions, signal bleedthrough from one detection channel to the other may still be problematic, depending on the expression level and localization of the GFP chimera. See Biochem J 356, 345 (2001) for further discussion. § The fluorescence emission spectra of styryl dyes such as FM 1-43 and FM 4-64 are broad and extend into the green emission range of GFP. In some cases, FM dye emission can overspill into the GFP detection channel, causing degraded resolution of image features. The excitation and emission spectra of FM 1-43 overlap those of GFP more extensively than those of FM 4-64. Therefore, using FM 4-64 instead of FM 1-43 is recommended to minimize this problem. Table 2. R0 values for FRET from EGFP to Alexa Fluor dyes. * Acceptor Dye Alexa Fluor 546 dye Alexa Fluor 555 dye Alexa Fluor 568 dye Alexa Fluor 594 dye R0 (Å) 57 63 54 53 * R0 values in angstroms (Å) represent the distance at which fluorescence resonance energy transfer from the donor dye to the acceptor dye is 50% efficient. Values were calculated from spectroscopic data as outlined (Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) - Note 1.2 ).