AI Article Synopsis

  • KillerRed (KR) is a new photosensitizer that produces reactive oxygen species (ROS) when exposed to bright green or white light, leading to cell damage and death.
  • Researchers created transgenic zebrafish expressing a membrane-tagged version of KR, allowing them to visualize cellular details and track the effects of KR on cell viability.
  • Using specific zebrafish lines, the study demonstrated that intense light exposure affected heart and hindbrain function, marking these transgenics as valuable for exploring ROS-related biological processes.

Article Abstract

Background: KillerRed (KR) is a novel photosensitizer that efficiently generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) in KR-expressing cells upon intense green or white light illumination in vitro, resulting in damage to their plasma membrane and cell death.

Results: We report an in vivo modification of this technique using a fluorescent microscope and membrane-tagged KR (mem-KR)-expressing transgenic zebrafish. We generated several stable zebrafish Tol2 transposon-mediated enhancer-trap (ET) transgenic lines expressing mem-KR (SqKR series), and mapped the transposon insertion sites. As mem-KR accumulates on the cell membrane and/or Golgi, it highlights cell bodies and extensions, and reveals details of cellular morphology. The photodynamic property of KR made it possible to damage cells expressing this protein in a dose-dependent manner. As a proof-of-principle, two zebrafish transgenic lines were used to affect cell viability and function: SqKR2 expresses mem-KR in the hindbrain rhombomeres 3 and 5, and elsewhere; SqKR15 expresses mem-KR in the heart and elsewhere. Photobleaching of KR by intense light in the heart of SqKR15 embryos at lower levels caused a reduction in pumping efficiency of the heart and pericardial edema and at higher levels - in cell death in the hindbrain of SqKR2 and in the heart of SqKR15 embryos.

Conclusions: An intense illumination of tissues expressing mem-KR affects cell viability and function in living zebrafish embryos. Hence, the zebrafish transgenics expressing mem-KR in a tissue-specific manner are useful tools for studying the biological effects of ROS.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2989954PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-213X-10-110DOI Listing

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