4.8 Article

Fluorescent probes towards selective cathepsin B detection and visualization in cancer cells and patient samples

Journal

CHEMICAL SCIENCE
Volume 10, Issue 36, Pages 8461-8477

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c9sc00997c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Center in Poland [UMO-2013/09/N/ST5/02448]
  2. National Institutes of Health in the USA [GM99040]
  3. Sanford Burnham Prebys NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30CA030199]
  4. European Union [661187]
  5. Slovene Research Agency [P1-0140, P1-0048]
  6. Foundation for Polish Science
  7. Marie Curie Actions (MSCA) [661187] Funding Source: Marie Curie Actions (MSCA)

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Human cysteine cathepsins constitute an 11-membered family of proteases responsible for degradation of proteins in cellular endosomal-lysosomal compartments as such, they play important roles in antigen processing, cellular stress signaling, autophagy, and senescence. Moreover, for many years these enzymes were also linked to tumor growth, invasion, angiogenesis and metastasis when upregulated. Individual biological roles of each cathepsin are difficult to establish, because of their redundancy and similar substrate specificities. Selective chemical tools that enable imaging of individual cathepsin activities in living cells, tumors, and the tumor microenvironment may provide a better insight into their functions. In this work, we used HyCoSuL technology to profile the substrate specificity of human cathepsin B. The use of unnatural amino acids in the substrate library enabled us to uncover the broad cathepsin B preferences that we utilized to design highly-selective substrates and fluorescent activity-based probes (ABPs). We further demonstrated that Cy5-labeled MP-CB-2 probe can selectively label cathepsin B in eighteen cancer cell lines tested, making this ABP highly suitable for other biological setups. Moreover, using Cy5-labelled MP-CB-2 we were able to demonstrate by fluorescence microscopy that in cancer cells cathepsins B and L share overlapping, but not identical subcellular localization.

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