Title: Non-Invasive Imaging of Protein Interactions within Living Models
1Non-Invasive Imaging of Protein Interactions
within Living Models
2Why study Protein Interactions?
- Regulates many of the essential biological
processes - Transcription
- Translation
- Metabolic pathways
- Signal Transduction
- Cell Cycle Progression
- etc.
- Yields information on possible roles of genes
with as of yet unknown functions - Detects novel interactions between proteins of
other various functions
http//www.wellesley.edu/Chemistry/chem227/nucleic
function/transcription/lac20operon/06eukaryotes.j
pg
3Protein-Protein Interaction Techniques
- Split Ubiquitin
- Protein Fragment Complementation
- Yeast Two-Hybrid
http//www.ittc.ku.edu/xwchen/Project_files/image
007.jpg
http//www.wesleyan.edu/mbb/faculty/imukerji/hbs3.
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4Split Ubiquitin
- Fusions of Ubiquitin (Ub) and a target protein
are recognized and cleaved by Ub-specific
Proteases (UBPs), that recognize the folded
conformation of Ub not the sequence - Ub can be expressed in yeast as an N-terminal
half (Nub) and a C-terminal half (Cub), which
have affinity for each other and spontaneously
assemble forming the split ubiquitin - If Nub and Cub are coexpressed in a single cell,
the reporter protein will be cleaved upon
reassembly - The bait protein is fused to Cub followed by a
reporter protein and a prey protein is fused to a
mutated Nub (NubG, lost affinity) - If interaction occurs then the NubG and Cub are
brought into proximity allowing reassembly and
cleavage by the UBPs, thus releasing the reporter
protein
Dualsystems Biotech
5Protein Fragment Complementation
- Uses an enzyme that usually produces a detectable
product (colorimetric, fluorometric, or survival) - i.e. murine dihydrofolate reductase (mDHFR)
reduces dihydrofolate into tetrahydrofolate - A bait protein is fused to one part of the
enzyme and a prey protein is fused to the other
part of the enzyme, both of which are
transfected/transformed into cells - If the proteins interact, they bring the subunits
of the enzyme within a close proximity, thus
enabling their reassembly into an active enzyme,
upon which the enzymes substrate is added and
the product can then be detected
Michnick et al. 1998
6Yeast Two-Hybrid
- Gal4 is a yeast transcription factor
- Each Gal4-responsive gene contains a target
sequence, UAS - When Gal4 binds the UAS, transcription is
activated from a downstream promoter - Bait gene fused to a GAL4 DNA-BD and a cDNA
library (or another known protein) fused to a
GAL4 DNA-AD - GAL4 DNA-BD can bind the UAS alone but cannot
activate transcription until bound with the GAL4
DNA-AD - When the two domains interact, BD and AD are
brought into proximity, thus activating
transcription of a downstream reporter gene
Clontech
7Various Imaging Techniques
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography
(SPECT) - Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET)
- Fluorescence
- Bioluminescence
8Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI)
- Used to visualize the inside of living organisms
- Demonstrates pathological or other physiological
alterations of living tissues (i.e. tumors) - Uses radio frequency signals to acquire images
- Based on the relaxation properties of excited
Hydrogen nuclei in water
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageUser-FastFissio
n-brain.gif
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image3Dbrain.gif
9MR Imaging Ability
- http//video.google.com/videoplay?docid3477454458
695092843qMRIhlen
10Positron Emission Tomography (PET)
- A nuclear medicine imaging technique that
produces a 3D image or map of functional
processes in the body - Uses a short-lived radioactive tracer isotope
which decays by emitting a positron (has been
chemically incorporated into a metabolically
active molecule) and is injected into the living
animal, usually in the blood - A waiting period ensues while the metabolically
active molecule (usually fluorodeoxyglucose, FDG)
becomes concentrated in tissues of interest - Result of two simultaneous annihilation photons
emitted back-to-back - The image produced is not the location of the
radionucleoside but that of where the
annihilation event occurs - Commonly used alongside CT scans or MRI scans,
giving both anatomic and metabolic information
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImagePET-MIPS-anim.g
if
11Single-Photon Emission Computed Tomography (SPECT)
- A nuclear medicine tomographic imaging technique
using gamma rays able to provide true 3D
information - A 2D view of the 3D distribution of a
radionucleotide from multiple angles - A computer is used to apply a tomographic
reconstruction algorithm to yield a 3D dataset - Can be manipulated to show thin slices along any
chosen axis of the body
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET)
- Energy transfer mechanism between two fluorescent
molecules - Useful tool to quantify molecular dynamics in
biophysics, such as protein-protein interactions,
protein-DNA interactions, and protein
conformational changes - Monitors the complex formation between two
molecules, one is labeled with a donor and the
other with an acceptor, which are then mixed - When they dissociate, the donor emission is
detected upon the donor excitation, but when
together, the acceptor emission is predominant
12Fluorescence
- Production and emission of light by a living
organism as the result of a chemical reaction
during which chemical energy is converted to
light energy - Uses an external light source with a low-pass
filter to excite the fluorescent molecules - Green Fluorescent Protein, originally found in
the Aequorea victoria species of jelly fish - Been biochemically modified to produce Green,
Yellow, Blue, Cyan, and Red Fluorescent Proteins
for use in various research techniques using a
reporter - Limited by tissue autofluorescence, as well as
the light being able to first get into the living
model and sensing the target fluorescent
molecule, then having that fluorescence get back
out of the model and to the detector (a lot of
scattering occurs)
http//wwwchem.leidenuniv.nl/metprot/armand/images
/029l.jpg
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ImageAequorea_victor
ia.jpg
http//www.upenn.edu/pennnews/photos/704/mice.jpg
13Bioluminescence
- Luciferase, an enzyme found in Fireflies, is also
commonly used as a reporter - Must be incorporated into the cell (i.e. tumor
xenograft) - Just before imaging, luciferin is added via IV or
IP, which can then rapidly travel throughout the
body and where ever it encounters luciferase,
oxygen, and ATP it will be converted to
oxyluciferin and produce a detectable light - Pros No external light source, no
autofluorescent background noise from surrounding
tissues, and depth of penetration is not as
limiting compared to its fluorescent counterparts - Cons Limited to studying genetically modified
cells, transgenic animal models, or infectious
agents - Gives a very weak signal and requires a highly
efficient Charge-coupled device (CCD) because it
has a strong dependence of signal intensity on
source depth
Cherry et al. 2004
14How to use the Molecular Imaging Techniques to
View Protein Interactions in Living Models
- Must first define your target of interest ?
usually Cell-Surface Receptors or Enzymes - Once chosen, need to next choose the method to
view it in the living model and therefore need to
also choose the contrast agent - Dependent on spatial arrangement and the desired
resolution, location and distribution of the
target, concentration of the target, and the
specificity of the target - Need an exogenous agent detectable by its
physical or chemical properties - Common agents include radioactive atoms,
fluorescent molecules, paramagnetic ions, or
small molecules covalently linked to the target
with similar properties as those listed
15Various Contrast Agents
Cherry et al. 2004
16Cell-Surface Receptor
- Similar concept to pharmaceuticals in that it
must find the target in the body and accumulate
there - Binds to the target, unbound portion must be
cleared from that tissue to be able to
distinguish the signal between specific and
non-specific - Administration is usually intravenously (IV) into
the bloodstream where it can rapidly travel
through the body, sometimes injection is
intraperitoneal (IP) within the abdominal cavity - The target must successfully trap the signal
molecule within the cell or tissue and thus
accumulate to provide an adequate signal
Cherry et al. 2004
17Enzymes
- Agents are designed to interact with the enzyme
target - Interaction of the signal agent with the enzyme
causes a change in the agent (i.e. charge) so
that it remains in that cell, trapped - Gadolinium (Gd3)
- Activatable agent
- Highly paramagnetic
- Enclosed in a molecular case where it is unable
to interact with water in the tissue - Interaction with the target enzyme breaks the
linker (the lid) thus causing a structural
change in the molecule where the Gd3 can now
interact with the water, changing the relaxation
state
Cherry et al. 2004
18Reporter Gene Method of Detection
- Genetically modify the cell
- Place the reporter gene under the control of the
same promoter of the gene of interest - cells expressing the reporter also express the
gene of interest in a ratio of approximately 11 - This is limiting because the reporter must be
introduced into the living model - Introduce the reporter gene into cancer cell
lines to track cancer cells and their progeny via
xenographs and tumor transplant models
Cherry et al. 2004
19Various Reporter Gene Systems
Cherry et al. 2004
20Noninvasive imaging of protein-protein
interactions in living animals
- Gary D. Luker, Vijay Sharma, Christina M. Pica,
Julie L. Dahlheimer, Wei Li, Joseph Ochesky,
Christine E. Ryan, Helen Piwnica-Worms, and David
Piwnica-Worms - Molecular Imaging Center, Mallinckrodt Institute
of Radiology and Departments of Molecular Biology
and Pharmacology, Cell Biology and Physiology,
and Internal Medicine, and Howard Hughes Medical
Institute, Washington University School of
Medicine, St. Louis, MO 63110 - Proposal To develop a method for detecting
protein-protein interactions in living mice by
combining the yeast two-hybrid system with
various reporter proteins sufficient for imaging
21Construction of Reporter Proteins
- HSV-1-TK ? Nucleoside analogs are actively
transported into cells and are preferentially
phosphorylated by the viral TK and not the
mammalian TK - Previous mutagenesis studies by Black et al.
showed a mutant HSV-1-TK with enhanced
sensitivity to 8-18F-fluoropenciclovir (PCV) ?
HSV-1-sr39TK - Degreve et al. showed that a mutation in the NLS
sequences of HSV-1-TK provided better uptake of
124I-FIAU - Disrupted one N-terminal NLS sequence of the
HSV-1-TK NLS ? mNLS-sr39TK - Fused EGFP into both ?
- HSV-1-sr39TK-EGFP
- mNLS-sr39TK-EGFP
22Characterization of the Two-Hybrid System
- Treatment with Doxycycline activates a reverse
tetracycline-responsive transactivator inducing
bi-directional transcription - p53 and TAg are known to interact
- BD binds the promoter and upon interaction
between p53 and TAg, AD is now in place to
promote transcription of the downstream reporters - mNLS-sr39TK can be used for microPET
- EGFP can be used for Fluorescence Microscopy
23Development of a Reporter Cell Line
- Stably transfected HeLa cells with
Gal4-mNLS-sr39TK-EGFP to develop a reporter cell
line?HeLa-Gal4 - Only cells expressing p53 and TAg showed cellular
accumulation of PCV - Stably transfected HeLa-Gal4 cells with the
various constructs and treated with doxycycline - Only expressed upon antibiotic treatment?tightly
regulated expression - Measured the activity of the nucleoside analog
reporter - Only saw activity when cells expressed both p53
and TAg, with treatment - GFP expression only in the presence of doxycycline
24Time course of Reporter Gene Induction
- To determine the peak expression time of the
reporter, cells either expressing p53/CP or
p53/TAg were treated with doxycycline for the
displayed times and PCV accumulation was then
measured - Peak expression time was at 48 h and then began
to decrease thereafter
25Imaging in Vivo Protein Interactions
- Produced xenograft tumors of TAg and CP cells of
nude mice - Once tumors grew to 5 mm, mice were treated and
imaged 1h after tail injection of 18F-FHGB - Fluorescent microscopy of excised tumors
displayed expression of GFP - Treated TAg tumor mice with doxycycline for 12,
24, and 48 h to determine if microPET could
quantify hybrid protein levels - Also looked at the biodistribution of 18F-FHGB
- The intensity of the reporter was proportional to
the amount of interacting proteins in vivo
26Conclusions
- Binding of p53/TAg in living mice was detected by
microPET imaging with 18F-FHGB - An approximate 6-fold increase in mNLS-sr39TK
activity occurred in response to the interaction
of p53 and TAg in vivo - Function of the reporter protein was enhanced
when increasing the amounts of interacting
proteins were used - In vivo microPET imaging could be used to
determine relative affinity differences between
interacting proteins previously shown in vitro - GFP fluorescent imaging in vivo could provide a
rapid screening assay for detecting the presence
or absence of protein-protein interactions - Xenograft models may be useful in the initial
characterization of drugs targeted to specific
protein interactions - Transgenic mice with reporter genes could allow
the interaction of proteins to be monitored in
their native environment - Potential to advance our understanding of how
protein interactions affect our normal
physiology, development, disease progression and
response to therapy
27References
- Cherry, S. R. (2004). "In vivo molecular and
genomic imaging new challenges for imaging
physics." Phys Med Biol 49(3) R13-48. - Gross, S. and D. Piwnica-Worms (2005). "Spying on
cancer molecular imaging in vivo with
genetically encoded reporters." Cancer Cell 7(1)
5-15. - Gross, S. and D. Piwnica-Worms (2006). "Molecular
imaging strategies for drug discovery and
development." Curr Opin Chem Biol 10(4) 334-42. - Haberkorn, U. and A. Altmann (2003). "Noninvasive
imaging of protein-protein interactions in
living organisms." Trends Biotechnol 21(6)
241-3. - Luker, G. D., J. P. Bardill, et al. (2002).
"Noninvasive bioluminescence imaging of herpes
simplex virus type 1 infection and therapy in
living mice." J Virol 76(23) 12149-61. - Luker, G. D., V. Sharma, et al. (2002).
"Noninvasive imaging of protein-protein
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Sci U S A 99(10) 6961-6. - Luker, G. D., V. Sharma, et al. (2003).
"Molecular imaging of protein-protein
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"Visualizing protein-protein interactions in
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"Kinetics of regulated protein-protein
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complementation imaging in cells and living
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