4.8 Article

HydroFlipper membrane tension probes: imaging membrane hydration and mechanical compression simultaneously in living cells

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 13, Issue 7, Pages 2086-2093

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sc05208j

Keywords

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Funding

  1. University of Geneva
  2. National Centre for Competence in Research (NCCR) Chemical Biology
  3. NCCR Molecular Systems Engineering
  4. Swiss NSF
  5. Swiss National Fund [31003A_149975, 31003A_173087]
  6. Synergia [CRSII5_189996]
  7. European Research Council Synergy Grant [951324-R2-TENSION]
  8. Societe Academique de Geneve
  9. Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) [31003A_149975, 31003A_173087, CRSII5_189996] Funding Source: Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF)

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HydroFlippers are fluorescent membrane tension probes that report on both membrane compression and hydration. Different cellular membranes show varied responses to tension-induced decompression and hydration. The mechanical compression is independent of the nature of the membrane of interest (MOI), while the response to hydration depends on the intrinsic order of the MOI.
HydroFlippers are introduced as the first fluorescent membrane tension probes that report simultaneously on membrane compression and hydration. The probe design is centered around a sensing cycle that couples the mechanical planarization of twisted push-pull fluorophores with the dynamic covalent hydration of their exocyclic acceptor. In FLIM images of living cells, tension-induced deplanarization is reported as a decrease in fluorescence lifetime of the dehydrated mechanophore. Membrane hydration is reported as the ratio of the photon counts associated to the hydrated and dehydrated mechanophores in reconvoluted lifetime frequency histograms. Trends for tension-induced decompression and hydration of cellular membranes of interest (MOIs) covering plasma membrane, lysosomes, mitochondria, ER, and Golgi are found not to be the same. Tension-induced changes in mechanical compression are rather independent of the nature of the MOI, while the responsiveness to changes in hydration are highly dependent on the intrinsic order of the MOI. These results confirm the mechanical planarization of push-pull probes in the ground state as most robust mechanism to routinely image membrane tension in living cells, while the availability of simultaneous information on membrane hydration will open new perspectives in mechanobiology.

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