Nature Communications (Apr 2020)

A rationally enhanced red fluorescent protein expands the utility of FRET biosensors

  • Gary C. H. Mo,
  • Clara Posner,
  • Erik A. Rodriguez,
  • Tengqian Sun,
  • Jin Zhang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-15687-x
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract Genetically encoded Förster Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET)-based biosensors are powerful tools to illuminate spatiotemporal regulation of cell signaling in living cells, but the utility of the red spectrum for biosensing was limited due to a lack of bright and stable red fluorescent proteins. Here, we rationally improve the photophysical characteristics of the coral-derived fluorescent protein TagRFP-T. We show that a new single-residue mutant, super-TagRFP (stagRFP) has nearly twice the molecular brightness of TagRFP-T and negligible photoactivation. stagRFP facilitates significant improvements on multiple green-red biosensors as a FRET acceptor and is an efficient FRET donor that supports red/far-red FRET biosensing. Capitalizing on the ability of stagRFP to couple with multiple FRET partners, we develop a novel multiplex method to examine the confluence of signaling activities from three kinases simultaneously in single living cells, providing evidence for a role of Src family kinases in regulating growth factor induced Akt and ERK activities.