International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Jan 2021)

Switching between Ultrafast Pathways Enables a Green-Red Emission Ratiometric Fluorescent-Protein-Based Ca<sup>2+</sup> Biosensor

  • Longteng Tang,
  • Shuce Zhang,
  • Yufeng Zhao,
  • Nikita D. Rozanov,
  • Liangdong Zhu,
  • Jiahui Wu,
  • Robert E. Campbell,
  • Chong Fang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms22010445
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 22, no. 1
p. 445

Abstract

Read online

Ratiometric indicators with long emission wavelengths are highly preferred in modern bioimaging and life sciences. Herein, we elucidated the working mechanism of a standalone red fluorescent protein (FP)-based Ca2+ biosensor, REX-GECO1, using a series of spectroscopic and computational methods. Upon 480 nm photoexcitation, the Ca2+-free biosensor chromophore becomes trapped in an excited dark state. Binding with Ca2+ switches the route to ultrafast excited-state proton transfer through a short hydrogen bond to an adjacent Glu80 residue, which is key for the biosensor’s functionality. Inspired by the 2D-fluorescence map, REX-GECO1 for Ca2+ imaging in the ionomycin-treated human HeLa cells was achieved for the first time with a red/green emission ratio change (ΔR/R0) of ~300%, outperforming many FRET- and single FP-based indicators. These spectroscopy-driven discoveries enable targeted design for the next-generation biosensors with larger dynamic range and longer emission wavelengths.

Keywords