Use of granzyme B-based fluorescent protein reporters to monitor granzyme distribution and granule integrity in live cells
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Catherina H. Bird
, Alexandra Rizzitelli , Ian Harper , Mark Prescott and Phillip I. Bird
Abstract
Reporter proteins comprising granzyme B (GrB) fused to eGFP, ecliptic pHluorin or mCherry, were generated and used to study granule (lysosome) distribution and properties in COS-1 cells and natural killer cells. The reporters resembled native GrB in biosynthesis and localization, and accumulated in granules. In live cells both the eGFP and pHluorin reporters were dark in lysosomes, but fluoresced when the granule integrity or pH was perturbed by Leu-Leu methyl ester, hydrogen peroxide, naphthazarin, or sphingosine treatment. By contrast, fluorescence of the mCherry reporter was not pH-dependent. The quenching of eGFP within granules indicates that this commonly-used fluorescent protein is not appropriate as a vital intra-lysosomal marker.
©2010 by Walter de Gruyter Berlin New York
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Articles in the same Issue
- Guest Editorial
- Highlight: The Biology of Proteolytic Systems
- Highlight: 6th General Meeting of the International Proteolysis Society
- Structure, mechanism and inhibition of γ-secretase and presenilin-like proteases
- Is BACE1 a suitable therapeutic target for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease? Current strategies and future directions
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