4.5 Article

Chromophore-assisted laser inactivation - towards a spatiotemporal-functional analysis of proteins, and the ablation of chromatin, organelle and cell function

Journal

JOURNAL OF CELL SCIENCE
Volume 127, Issue 8, Pages 1621-1629

Publisher

COMPANY BIOLOGISTS LTD
DOI: 10.1242/jcs.144527

Keywords

Chromophore; Photosensitizer; Spatiotemporal inactivation; Reactive oxygen species; Imaging

Categories

Funding

  1. SENTAN grant from the Japan Science and Technology Agency
  2. CREST grant from the Japan Science and Technology Agency
  3. MEXT/JSPS KAKENHI [20370027, 20061020, 21027023, 23012027, 23370029, 23120518, 25114514, 25120726]
  4. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [23370029, 21027023, 20061020, 20370027, 25114514, 26291067, 23012027] Funding Source: KAKEN

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Chromophore-assisted laser or light inactivation (CALI) has been employed as a promising technique to achieve spatiotemporal knockdown or loss-of-function of target molecules in situ. CALI is performed using photosensitizers as generators of reactive oxygen species (ROS). There are two CALI approaches that use either transgenic tags with chemical photosensitizers, or genetically encoded fluorescent protein fusions. Using spatially restricted microscopy illumination, CALI can address questions regarding, for example, protein isoforms, subcellular localization or phase-specific analyses of multifunctional proteins that other knockdown approaches, such as RNA interference or treatment with chemicals, cannot. Furthermore, rescue experiments can clarify the phenotypic capabilities of CALI after the depletion of endogenous targets. CALI can also provide information about individual events that are involved in the function of a target protein and highlight them in multifactorial events. Beyond functional analysis of proteins, CALI of nuclear proteins can be performed to induce cell cycle arrest, chromatin-or locus-specific DNA damage. Even at organelle level such as in mitochondria, the plasma membrane or lysosomes - CALI can trigger cell death. Moreover, CALI has emerged as an optogenetic tool to switch off signaling pathways, including the optical depletion of individual neurons. In this Commentary, we review recent applications of CALI and discuss the utility and effective use of CALI to address open questions in cell biology.

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