Fluorescence Anisotropy Uncovers Changes in Protein
Packing with Inclusion Growth in a Cellular Model of Polyglutamine
Aggregation
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Abstract
The aggregation of polyglutamine-rich
proteins is closely linked
with numerous neurodegenerative disorders. In pathological and cellular
models, the appearance of protein-rich inclusions in cells acts as
a read out of protein aggregation. The precise organization of aggregated
protein in these inclusions and their mode of growth are still poorly
understood. Here, fluorescence anisotropy-based measurements have
been used to probe protein packing across inclusions of varying brightness,
formed by an monomeric enhanced green fluorescent protein (mEGFP)-tagged
polyglutamine model peptide in cells. High-resolution, confocal-based
steady-state anisotropy measurements report a large depolarization,
consistent with extensive homo-Förster (fluorescence) resonance
energy transfer (FRET) between the sequestered mEGFP-tagged protein
molecules. An inverse correlation of fluorescence anisotropy with
intensity is seen across inclusions, which becomes emphasized when
the observed fluorescence anisotropy values of inclusions are corrected
for the fluorescence contribution of the diffusible protein, present
within and around smaller inclusions. Homo-FRET becomes enhanced as
inclusion size increases. This enhancement is confirmed by two-photon
excitation-based time-resolved fluorescence anisotropy decay measurements,
which also suggest that the mEGFP-tagged protein molecules are arranged
in multiple ways within inclusions. Bright inclusions display faster
FRET rates with a larger number of mEGFP moieties participating in
homo-FRET than faint inclusions do. These results are consistent with
a model in which the protein is more closely packed in the brighter
inclusions. In such a possible mechanism, the higher packing density
of protein molecules in brighter inclusions would suggest that inclusion
growth could involve an intermolecular compaction event within the
inclusion, as more monomers and aggregates are recruited into the
growing inclusion