Toolbox
of Fluorescent Probes for Parallel Imaging
Reveals Uneven Location of Serine Proteases in Neutrophils
- Publication date
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Abstract
Neutrophils,
the front line defenders against infection, express
four serine proteases (NSPs) that play roles in the control of cell-signaling
pathways and defense against pathogens and whose imbalance leads to
pathological conditions. Dissecting the roles of individual NSPs in
humans is problematic because neutrophils are end-stage cells with
a short half-life and minimal ongoing protein synthesis. To gain insight
into the regulation of NSP activity we have generated a small-molecule
chemical toolbox consisting of activity-based probes with different
fluorophore-detecting groups with minimal wavelength overlap and highly
selective natural and unnatural amino acid recognition sequences.
The key feature of these activity-based probes is the ability to use
them for simultaneous observation and detection of all four individual
NSPs by fluorescence microscopy, a feature never achieved in previous
studies. Using these probes we demonstrate uneven distribution of
NSPs in neutrophil azurophil granules, such that they seem to be mutually
excluded from each other, suggesting the existence of unknown granule-targeting
mechanisms