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A one-step protocol to generate impermeable fluorescent HaloTag substrates for in situ live cell application and super-resolution imaging.

Publication ,  Journal Article
Roßmann, K; Sun, S; Olesen, CH; Kowald, M; Tapp, E; Pabst, U; Bieck, M; Birke, R; Shields, BC; Jeong, P; Hong, J; Tadross, MR; Levitz, J ...
Published in: bioRxiv
September 23, 2024

Communication between cells is largely orchestrated by proteins on the cell surface, which allow information transfer across the cell membrane. Super-resolution and single-molecule visualization of these proteins can be achieved by genetically grafting HTP (HaloTag Protein) into the protein of interest followed by brief incubation of cells with a dye-HTL (dye-linked HaloTag Ligand). This approach allows for use of cutting-edge fluorophores optimized for specific optical techniques or a cell-impermeable dye-HTL to selectively label surface proteins without labeling intracellular copies. However, these two goals often conflict, as many high-performing dyes exhibit membrane permeability. Traditional methods to eliminate cell permeability face synthetic bottlenecks and risk altering photophysical properties. Here we report that dye-HTL reagents can be made cell-impermeable by inserting a charged sulfonate directly into the HTL, leaving the dye moiety unperturbed. This simple, one-step method requires no purification and is compatible with both the original HTL and second-generation HTL.2, the latter offering accelerated labeling. We validate such compounds, termed dye-SHTL ('dye shuttle') conjugates, in live cells via widefield microscopy, demonstrating exclusive membrane staining of extracellular HTP fusion proteins. In transduced primary hippocampal neurons, we label mGluR2, a neuromodulatory G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), with dyes optimized for stimulated emission by depletion (STED) super-resolution microscopy, allowing unprecedented accuracy in distinguishing surface and receptors from those in internal compartments of the presynaptic terminal, important in neural communication. This approach offers broad utility for surface-specific protein labelling.

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Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

September 23, 2024

Location

United States
 

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Roßmann, K., Sun, S., Olesen, C. H., Kowald, M., Tapp, E., Pabst, U., … Broichhagen, J. (2024). A one-step protocol to generate impermeable fluorescent HaloTag substrates for in situ live cell application and super-resolution imaging. BioRxiv. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.20.614087
Roßmann, Kilian, Siqi Sun, Christina Holmboe Olesen, Maria Kowald, Eleni Tapp, Ulrich Pabst, Marie Bieck, et al. “A one-step protocol to generate impermeable fluorescent HaloTag substrates for in situ live cell application and super-resolution imaging.BioRxiv, September 23, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.09.20.614087.
Roßmann K, Sun S, Olesen CH, Kowald M, Tapp E, Pabst U, Bieck M, Birke R, Shields BC, Jeong P, Hong J, Tadross MR, Levitz J, Lehmann M, Lipstein N, Broichhagen J. A one-step protocol to generate impermeable fluorescent HaloTag substrates for in situ live cell application and super-resolution imaging. bioRxiv. 2024 Sep 23;

Published In

bioRxiv

DOI

EISSN

2692-8205

Publication Date

September 23, 2024

Location

United States