2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(155e) Bioimaging of Phosphorylation of Erk1 in Living Cell Using Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer
Authors
In this study, we attempted to use an enhanced FRET immunoassay method[1], which was developed to analyze antigen concentration with homogeneous assay format. This method can detect intact proteins in vitro using two antibody-fluorescent protein conjugates. In the presence of antigen protein, these conjugates bind to antigen protein and close to each other, and then increase of FRET ratio can be observed. Moreover, to help neighboring of these conjugates, we tethered each conjugate with a leucine zipper motif (c-Jun) at the C-terminus. Here we evaluated whether this method could work in living cells.
F(ab)' fragment of anti-GST antibody and that of antibody recognizing the phosphorylation site of MAPK (ERK1) were conjugated with ECFP-Jun and EYFP-Jun, respectively. Together with GST-ERK1, a model signal transduction molecule, both conjugates were introduced into HeLa cell by microinjection. MAPK signal transduction pathway of HeLa cells was activated by addition of EGF. As a result, GST-ERK1 introduced into the cell was phosphorylated, consequently, increase of FRET ratio from 1.19 to 1.61 was observed in cytoplasm at 6 minutes after addition of EGF. Then FRET ratio decreased but kept an obviously higher value than the base level even after 25 minutes.
By using appropriate fragments of antibodies for target molecules, this method will find a range of applications for real time bio-imaging of endogenous proteins and their behavior specifically in living cells.
Reference: [1]. Y. Ohiro, R. Arai, H. Ueda, T. Nagamune, Analytical Chemistry 74(22): 5786-5792, (2002)