4.8 Article

Molecular Imaging of Labile Iron(II) Pools in Living Cells with a Turn-On Fluorescent Probe

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 135, Issue 40, Pages 15165-15173

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ja4072964

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH [GM79465]
  2. Packard Foundation
  3. UC Berkeley
  4. Croucher Foundation
  5. Human Frontiers Science Program
  6. Ministry of Science, Thailand

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Iron is an essential metal for living organisms, but misregulation of its homeostasis at the cellular level can trigger detrimental oxidative and/or nitrosative stress and damage events. Motivated to help study the physiological and pathological consequences of biological iron regulation, we now report a reaction-based strategy for monitoring labile Fe2+ pools in aqueous solution and living cells. Iron Probe 1 (IP1) exploits a bioinspired, iron-mediated oxidative C-O bond cleavage reaction to achieve a selective turn-on response to Fe2+ over a range of cellular metal ions in their bioavailable forms. We show that this first-generation chemical tool for fluorescence Fe2+ detection can visualize changes in exchangeable iron stores in living cells upon iron supplementation or depletion, including labile iron pools at endogenous, basal levels. Moreover, IP1 can be used to identify reversible expansion of labile iron pools by stimulation with vitamin C or the iron regulatory hormone hepcidin, providing a starting point for further investigations of iron signaling and stress events in living systems as well as future probe development.

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