A bright cyan-excitable orange fluorescent protein facilitates dual-emission microscopy and enhances bioluminescence imaging in vivo

In vivo imaging is facilitated by a bright, cyan-excitable orange fluorescent protein that is the basis of an improved bioluminescent protein. Orange-red fluorescent proteins (FPs) are widely used in biomedical research for multiplexed epifluorescence microscopy with GFP-based probes, but their diff...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature biotechnology 2016-07, Vol.34 (7), p.760-767
Hauptverfasser: Chu, Jun, Oh, Younghee, Sens, Alex, Ataie, Niloufar, Dana, Hod, Macklin, John J, Laviv, Tal, Welf, Erik S, Dean, Kevin M, Zhang, Feijie, Kim, Benjamin B, Tang, Clement Tran, Hu, Michelle, Baird, Michelle A, Davidson, Michael W, Kay, Mark A, Fiolka, Reto, Yasuda, Ryohei, Kim, Douglas S, Ng, Ho-Leung, Lin, Michael Z
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In vivo imaging is facilitated by a bright, cyan-excitable orange fluorescent protein that is the basis of an improved bioluminescent protein. Orange-red fluorescent proteins (FPs) are widely used in biomedical research for multiplexed epifluorescence microscopy with GFP-based probes, but their different excitation requirements make multiplexing with new advanced microscopy methods difficult. Separately, orange-red FPs are useful for deep-tissue imaging in mammals owing to the relative tissue transmissibility of orange-red light, but their dependence on illumination limits their sensitivity as reporters in deep tissues. Here we describe CyOFP1, a bright, engineered, orange-red FP that is excitable by cyan light. We show that CyOFP1 enables single-excitation multiplexed imaging with GFP-based probes in single-photon and two-photon microscopy, including time-lapse imaging in light-sheet systems. CyOFP1 also serves as an efficient acceptor for resonance energy transfer from the highly catalytic blue-emitting luciferase NanoLuc. An optimized fusion of CyOFP1 and NanoLuc, called Antares, functions as a highly sensitive bioluminescent reporter in vivo , producing substantially brighter signals from deep tissues than firefly luciferase and other bioluminescent proteins.
ISSN:1087-0156
1546-1696
DOI:10.1038/nbt.3550