Bioorthogonal photocatalytic proximity labeling in primary living samples.

Nat Commun

Synthetic and Functional Biomolecules Center, Key Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry and Molecular Engineering of Ministry of Education, Beijing National Laboratory for Molecular Sciences, College of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering, Peking University, Beijing, China.

Published: March 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers developed a new method called CAT-S for profiling mitochondrial proteins in live cells, which is important for studying life and diseases in primary living systems.
  • CAT-S uses advanced chemistry to label mitochondrial proteins efficiently, allowing the study of their characteristics in various samples, including human blood and mouse tissues.
  • This method can uncover hidden mitochondrial proteins and analyze how protein changes correlate with diseases, such as alterations in lipid metabolism in diabetic kidneys.

Article Abstract

In situ profiling of subcellular proteomics in primary living systems, such as native tissues or clinic samples, is crucial for understanding life processes and diseases, yet challenging due to methodological obstacles. Here we report CAT-S, a bioorthogonal photocatalytic chemistry-enabled proximity labeling method, that expands proximity labeling to a wide range of primary living samples for in situ profiling of mitochondrial proteomes. Powered by our thioQM labeling warhead development and targeted bioorthogonal photocatalytic chemistry, CAT-S enables the labeling of mitochondrial proteins in living cells with high efficiency and specificity. We apply CAT-S to diverse cell cultures, dissociated mouse tissues as well as primary T cells from human blood, portraying the native-state mitochondrial proteomic characteristics, and unveiled hidden mitochondrial proteins (PTPN1, SLC35A4 uORF, and TRABD). Furthermore, CAT-S allows quantification of proteomic perturbations on dysfunctional tissues, exampled by diabetic mouse kidneys, revealing the alterations of lipid metabolism that may drive disease progression. Given the advantages of non-genetic operation, generality, and spatiotemporal resolution, CAT-S may open exciting avenues for subcellular proteomic investigations of primary samples that are otherwise inaccessible.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10978841PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-024-46985-3DOI Listing

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