4.8 Article

Genetically encoded RNA-based sensors with Pepper fluorogenic aptamer

Journal

NUCLEIC ACIDS RESEARCH
Volume 51, Issue 16, Pages 8322-8336

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/nar/gkad620

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Sensors to measure intracellular molecules are important for understanding their functions, with RNA-based sensors being promising tools. In this study, we describe the development of RNA-based sensors using Pepper, a fluorogenic RNA without an RG4 motif. These sensors demonstrate high activation and selectivity for diverse cellular targets and their signaling pathways, enabling us to monitor and understand important processes such as SAM biosynthesis and MATase activity in living cells.
Sensors to measure the abundance and signaling of intracellular molecules are crucial for understanding their physiological functions. Although conventional fluorescent protein-based sensors have been designed, RNA-based sensors are promising imaging tools. Numerous RNA-based sensors have been developed. These sensors typically contain RNA G-quadruplex (RG4) motifs and thus may be suboptimal in living cells. Here we describe RNA-based sensors based on Pepper, a fluorogenic RNA without an RG4 motif. With Pepper, we engineered various sensors for metabolites, synthetic compounds, proteins and metal ions in vitro and in living cells. In addition, these sensors show high activation and selectivity, demonstrating their universality and robustness. In the case of sensors responding to S-adenosylmethionine (SAM), a metabolite produced by methionine adenosyltransferase (MATase), we showed that our sensors exhibited positively correlated fluorescence responding to different SAM levels. Importantly, we revealed the SAM biosynthesis pathway and monitored MATase activity and gene expression spatiotemporally in living individual human cells. Additionally, we constructed a ratiometric SAM sensor to determine the inhibition efficacy of a MATase inhibitor in living cells. Together, these sensors comprising Pepper provide a useful platform for imaging diverse cellular targets and their signaling pathway.

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