Tyrosinase-Based Proximity Labeling in Living Cells and .

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Synthetic Chemistry and Biological Chemistry, Graduate School of Engineering, Kyoto University, Katsura, Nishikyo-ku, Kyoto 615-8510, Japan.

Published: March 2024

Characterizing the protein constituents of a specific organelle and protein neighbors of a protein of interest (POI) is essential for understanding the function and state of the organelle and protein networks associated with the POI. Proximity labeling (PL) has emerged as a promising technology for specific and efficient spatial proteomics. Nevertheless, most enzymes adopted for PL still have limitations: APEX requires cytotoxic HO for activation and thus is poor in biocompatibility for application, BioID shows insufficient labeling kinetics, and TurboID suffers from high background biotinylation. Here, we introduce a bacterial tyrosinase (BmTyr) as a new PL enzyme suitable for HO-free, fast (≤10 min in living cells), and low-background protein tagging. BmTyr is genetically encodable and enables subcellular-resolved PL and proteomics in living cells. We further designed a strategy of ligand-tethered BmTyr for PL, which unveiled the surrounding proteome of a neurotransmitter receptor (Grm1 and Drd2) in its resident synapse in a live mouse brain. Overall, BmTyr is one promising enzyme that can improve and expand PL-based applications and discoveries.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.3c13183DOI Listing

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