4.4 Article

Light-induced, spatiotemporal control of protein in the developing embryo of the sea urchin

Journal

DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY
Volume 478, Issue -, Pages 13-24

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ydbio.2021.06.006

Keywords

Kaede; CALI; Photoconvertible protein; Embryonic development; Sea urchin embryo

Funding

  1. American Heart Association Scientist Development Grant [14SDG18350021]
  2. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [1R01GM126043-01, RO1GM125071]
  3. National Science Foundation [IOS-1940975, IOS-1923445]

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Differential protein regulation is critical in biological processes, and light-induced approaches can accurately control protein functions, but the efficacy needs to be tested for each system.
Differential protein regulation is a critical biological process that regulates cellular activity and controls cell fate determination. It is especially important during early embryogenesis when post-transcriptional events predominate differential fate specification in many organisms. Light-induced approaches have been a powerful technology to interrogate protein functions with temporal and spatial precision, even at subcellular levels within a cell by controlling laser irradiation on the confocal microscope. However, application and efficacy of these tools need to be tested for each model system or for the cell type of interest because of the complex nature of each system. Here, we introduce two types of light-induced approaches to track and control proteins at a subcellular level in the developing embryo of the sea urchin. We found that the photoconvertible fluorescent protein Kaede is highly efficient to distinguish pre-existing and newly synthesized proteins with no apparent phototoxicity, even when interrogating proteins associated with the mitotic spindle. Further, chromophore-assisted light inactivation (CALI) using miniSOG successfully inactivated target proteins of interest in the vegetal cortex and selectively delayed or inhibited asymmetric cell division. Overall, these light-induced manipulations serve as important molecular tools to identify protein function for for subcellular interrogations in developing embryos.

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