The high electric field across the plasma membrane might influence the conformation and behavior of transmembrane proteins that have uneven charge distributions in or near their transmembrane regions. Membrane depolarization of T cells occurs in the tumor microenvironment and in inflamed tissues because of K release from necrotic cells and hypoxia affecting the expression of K channels. However, little attention has been given to the effect of membrane potential (MP) changes on membrane receptor function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMHC glycoproteins form supramolecular clusters with interleukin-2 and -15 receptors in lipid rafts of T cells. The role of highly expressed MHC I in maintaining these clusters is unknown. We knocked down MHC I in FT7.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe interleukin-9 receptor (IL-9R) consists of an α subunit and a γ(c) chain that are shared with other cytokine receptors, including interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R), an important regulator of T cells. We previously showed that IL-2R is expressed in common clusters with major histocompatibility complex (MHC) glycoproteins in lipid rafts of human T lymphoma cells, which raised the question about what the relationship between clusters of IL-2R/MHC and IL-9R is. Confocal microscopy colocalization and fluorescence resonance energy transfer experiments capable of detecting membrane protein organization at different size scales revealed nonrandom association of IL-9R with IL-2R/MHC clusters at the surface of human T lymphoma cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Protoc Cytom
October 2009
Fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) is a fluctuation method established three decades ago, whose application to cellular systems became popular in the last decade. Fluctuations of fluorescence emission are observed from a small, femtoliter to sub-femtoliter, usually confocal volume at high time resolution. A time-dependent autocorrelation function is generated and evaluated to obtain time constants of photophysical and photochemical reactions, as well as of molecular diffusion and in the observation volume.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSpatial organization of cell surface proteins plays a key role in the process of transmembrane signalling. Receptor clustering and changes in their cell surface distribution are often determining factors in the final outcome of ligand-receptor interactions. There are several techniques for assessing the distribution of protein molecules.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis unit presents protocols describing the measurement of protein associations using FRET as determined by flow and image cytometry. The proteins under investigation can be labeled by fluorescent antibodies or fluorescent protein (FP) variants. The flow cytometry protocols determine FRET based on the measurement of donor quenching, which provides a FRET value on a population basis, or based on the measurement of fluorescence intensities in the donor, FRET, and acceptor channels, which provides cell-by-cell FRET values.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis unit describes the basic principles of the fluorescence resonance energy (FRET) process. In addition, it characterizes available parameters and instruments for FRET measurements, discusses limitations, and shows a few examples of the application of FRET.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterleukin 2 and interleukin 15 (IL2 and IL15, respectively) provide quite distinct contributions to T-cell-mediated immunity, despite having similar receptor composition and signaling machinery. As most of the proposed mechanisms underlying this apparent paradox attribute key significance to the individual alpha-chains of IL2 and IL15 receptors, we investigated the spatial organization of the receptors IL2Ralpha and IL15Ralpha at the nanometer scale expressed on a human CD4+ leukemia T cell line using single-molecule-sensitive near-field scanning optical microscopy (NSOM). In agreement with previous findings, we here confirm clustering of IL2Ralpha and IL15Ralpha at the submicron scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInterleukin-2 and interleukin-15 (IL-2, IL-15) are key participants in T and NK cell activation and function. Sharing the beta and gamma receptor subunits results in several common functions: e.g.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe activator protein-1 transcription factor is a heterodimer containing one of each of the Fos and Jun subfamilies of basic-region leucine-zipper proteins. We have previously shown by fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy (FCCS) that the fluorescent fusion proteins Fos-EGFP and Jun-mRFP1, cotransfected in HeLa cells, formed stable complexes in situ. Here we studied the relative position of the C-terminal domains via fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) measured by flow cytometry and confocal microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe role of the expression patterns of proteins involved in oncogenesis can be understood after characterizing their multimolecular interactions. Conventional FRET methods permit the analysis of interaction between two molecular species at the most, which necessitates the introduction of new approaches for studying multicomponent signaling complexes. Flow cytometric as well as microscopic donor (dbFRET) and acceptor (abFRET) photobleaching FRET measurements were performed to determine the association states of ErbB2, beta1-integrin, and CD44 receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA concise review is presented on the nature, possible origin and functional significance of cell surface receptor patterns in the plasma membrane of lymphoid cells. A special emphasize has been laid on the available methodological approaches, their individual virtues and sources of errors. Fluorescence energy transfer is one of the oldest available means for studying non-randomized co-distribution patterns of cell surface receptors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
September 2006
ICAM-1 and MHC-I proteins play fundamental roles in antigen presentation, activation of T lymphocytes, and immune responses against tumor cells. Both of them participate in the formation of lipid raft-associated membrane protein clusters. We found significant colocalization between ICAM-1 and MHC-I at the level of large-scale associations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe formation of protein patterns in lymphocyte plasma membranes is analyzed in the light of past and, also, very recent experiments. The analysis surveys the lateral organization of major histocompatibility complex glycoproteins, intercellular adhesion molecule-1, interleukin-2 and -15 receptors, Kv1.3 K+ ion channels and the T-cell receptor as well as their behavior under different conditions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The photobleaching fluorescence resonance energy transfer (pbFRET) technique is a spectroscopic method to measure proximity relations between fluorescently labeled macromolecules using digital imaging microscopy. To calculate the energy transfer values one has to determine the bleaching time constants in pixel-by-pixel fashion from the image series recorded on the donor-only and donor and acceptor double-labeled samples. Because of the large number of pixels and the time-consuming calculations, this procedure should be assisted by powerful image data processing software.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The combination of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) and flow cytometry offers a statistically firm approach to study protein associations. Fusing green fluorescent protein (GFP) to a studied protein usually does not disturb the normal function of a protein, but quantitation of FRET efficiency calculated between GFP derivatives poses a problem in flow cytometry.
Methods: We generated chimeras in which cyan fluorescent protein (CFP) was separated by amino acid linkers of different sizes from yellow fluorescent protein (YFP) and used them to calibrate the cell-by-cell flow cytometric FRET measurements carried out on two different dual-laser flow cytometers.
Fluorescence energy homotransfer offers a powerful tool for the investigation of the state of oligomerization of cell surface receptors on a cell-by-cell basis by measuring the polarized components of fluorescence intensity of cells labeled with fluorescently stained antibodies. Here we describe homotransfer-based methods for the flow cytometric detection and analysis of hetero- and homo-associations of cell surface receptors. Homotransfer efficiencies for two- and three-body energy transfer interactions are defined and their frequency distribution curves are computed from the fluorescence anisotropy distributions of multiple-labeled cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMost tumor cells attain their immortality by reactivating telomerase. We report here the telomerase inhibitory potential of chimeric oligonucleotides composed of a 13mer antisense sequence targeting the telomerase RNA template region and a (s4dU)n moiety at its 3' or 5'-end. The increase of the thiolated chain length enhances the telomerase inhibitory potential, but decreases specificity, indicated by HIV reverse transcriptase inhibition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMembrane topology of receptors plays an important role in shaping transmembrane signalling of cells. Among the methods used for characterizing receptor clusters, fluorescence resonance energy transfer between a donor and acceptor fluorophore plays a unique role based on its capability of detecting molecular level (2-10 nm) proximities of receptors in physiological conditions. Recent development of biotechnology has made possible the usage of colloidal gold particles in a large size range for specific labelling of cells for the purposes of electron microscopy.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGold nanoparticles of 30 nm diameter bound to cell-surface receptor major histocompatibility complex glycoproteins (MHCI and MHCII), interleukin-2 receptor alpha subunit (IL-2Ralpha), very late antigen-4 (VLA-4) integrin, transferrin receptor, and the receptor-type protein tyrosin phosphatase CD45 are shown by the patch-clamp technique to selectively modulate binding characteristics of Pi(2) toxin, an efficient blocker of K(v)1.3 channels. After correlating the electrophysiological data with those on the underlying receptor clusters obtained by simultaneously conducted flow cytometric energy transfer measurements, the modulation was proved to be sensitive to the density and size of the receptor clusters, and to the locations of the receptors as well.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBiochem Biophys Res Commun
September 2004
Comput Methods Programs Biomed
September 2004
The determination of fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) with flow cytometry (FCET) is one of the most efficient tools to study the proximity relationships of cell membrane components in cell populations on a cell-by-cell basis. Because of the high amount of data and the relatively tedious calculations, this procedure should be assisted by powerful data processing software. The currently available programs are not able to fulfill this requirement.
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