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A one-step protocol to generate impermeable fluorescent HaloTag substrates for in situ live cell application and super-resolution imaging

Rossmann, K.; Sun, S.; Olesen, C. H.; Kowald, M.; Tapp, E.; Pabst, U.; Bieck, M.; Birke, R.; Shields, B. C.; Jeong, P.; Hong, J.; Tadross, M. R.; Levitz, J.; Lehmann, M.; Lipstein, N.; Broichhagen, J.

2024-09-23 pharmacology and toxicology
10.1101/2024.09.20.614087 bioRxiv
Show abstract

Communication between cells is largely orchestrated by proteins on the cell surface, which allow information transfer across the cell membrane. Super-resolution and single-molecule visualization of these proteins can be achieved by genetically grafting HTP (HaloTag Protein) into the protein of interest followed by brief incubation of cells with a dye-HTL (dye-linked HaloTag Ligand). This approach allows for use of cutting-edge fluorophores optimized for specific optical techniques or a cell-impermeable dye-HTL to selectively label surface proteins without labeling intracellular copies. However, these two goals often conflict, as many high-performing dyes exhibit membrane permeability. Traditional methods to eliminate cell permeability face synthetic bottlenecks and risk altering photophysical properties. Here we report that dye-HTL reagents can be made cell-impermeable by inserting a charged sulfonate directly into the HTL, leaving the dye moiety unperturbed. This simple, one-step method requires no purification and is compatible with both the original HTL and second-generation HTL.2, the latter offering accelerated labeling. We validate such compounds, termed dye-SHTL ( dye shuttle) conjugates, in live cells via widefield microscopy, demonstrating exclusive membrane staining of extracellular HTP fusion proteins. In transduced primary hippocampal neurons, we label mGluR2, a neuromodulatory G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), with dyes optimized for stimulated emission by depletion (STED) super-resolution microscopy, allowing unprecedented accuracy in distinguishing surface and receptors from those in internal compartments of the presynaptic terminal, important in neural communication. This approach offers broad utility for surface-specific protein labelling.

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