4.6 Article

In Situ Dimerization of Multiple Wild Type and Mutant Zinc Transporters in Live Cells Using Bimolecular Fluorescence Complementation

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 289, Issue 11, Pages 7275-7292

Publisher

AMER SOC BIOCHEMISTRY MOLECULAR BIOLOGY INC
DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M113.533786

Keywords

Metal Homeostasis; Mutant; Protein-Protein Interactions; Transport Metals; Zinc

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Background: Zinc transporters (ZnTs) presumably form dimers, thereby modulating zinc transport activity. Results: Bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) revealed ZnT1-4, ZnT7 homodimers and ZnT5-ZnT6 heterodimers. Conclusion: BiFC pinpointed WT and mutant ZnT2 dimerization in live cells. Significance: BiFC provides the first in situ evidence for the subcellular localization of WT and mutant ZnT2 dimers in live cells, thereby establishing the molecular basis underlying zinc deficiency. Zinc transporters (ZnTs) facilitate zinc efflux and zinc compartmentalization, thereby playing a key role in multiple physiological processes and pathological disorders, presumed to be modulated by transporter dimerization. We recently proposed that ZnT2 homodimerization is the underlying basis for the dominant negative effect of a novel heterozygous G87R mutation identified in women producing zinc-deficient milk. To provide direct visual evidence for the in situ dimerization and function of multiple normal and mutant ZnTs, we applied here the bimolecular fluorescence complementation (BiFC) technique, which enables direct visualization of specific protein-protein interactions. BiFC is based upon reconstitution of an intact fluorescent protein including YFP when its two complementary, non-fluorescent N- and C-terminal fragments (termed YN and YC) are brought together by a pair of specifically interacting proteins. Homodimerization of ZnT1, -2, -3, -4, and -7 was revealed by high subcellular fluorescence observed upon co-transfection of non-fluorescent ZnT-YC and ZnT-YN; this homodimer fluorescence localized in the characteristic compartments of each ZnT. The validity of the BiFC assay in ZnT dimerization was further corroborated when high fluorescence was obtained upon co-transfection of ZnT5-YC and ZnT6-YN, which are known to form heterodimers. We further show that BiFC recapitulated the pathogenic role that ZnT mutations play in transient neonatal zinc deficiency. Zinquin, a fluorescent zinc probe applied along with BiFC, revealed the in situ functionality of ZnT dimers. Hence, the current BiFC-Zinquin technique provides the first in situ evidence for the dimerization and function of wild type and mutant ZnTs in live cells.

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