4.5 Article

Fluorescently labeled collagen binding proteins allow specific visualization of collagen in tissues and live cell culture

Journal

ANALYTICAL BIOCHEMISTRY
Volume 350, Issue 2, Pages 177-185

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.ab.2006.01.013

Keywords

collagen; fluorescent probe; tissue engineering; CNA; integrin alpha(1); DTAF

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Visualization of the formation and orientation of collagen fibers in tissue engineering experiments is crucial for understanding the factors that determine the mechanical properties of tissues. In this study, collagen-specific fluorescent probes were developed using a new approach that takes advantage of the inherent specificity of collagen binding protein domains present in bacterial adhesion proteins (CNA35) and integrins (GST-alpha I-1). Both collagen binding domains were obtained as fusion proteins from an Escherichia coli expression system and fluorescently labeled using either amine-reactive succinimide (CNA35) or cysteine-reactive maleimide (GST-alpha I-1) dyes. Solid-phase binding assays showed that both protein-based probes are much more specific than dichlorotriazinyl aminofluorescein (DTAF), a fluorescent dye that is currently used to track collagen formation in tissue engineering experiments. The CNA35 probe showed a higher affinity for human collagen type I than did the GST-alpha I-1 probe (apparent K-d values of 0.5 and 50 mu M, respectively) and showed very little cross-reactivity with noncollagenous extracellular matrix proteins. The CNA35 probe was also superior to both GST-a(1)I and DTAF in visualizing the formation of collagen fibers around live human venous saphena cells. Immunohistological experiments on rat tissue Showed colocalization of the CNA35 probe with collagen type I and type III antibodies. The fluorescent probes described here have important advantages over existing methods for Visualization of collagen, in particular for monitoring the formation of collagen in live tissue Cultures over prolonged time periods. (c) 2006 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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