Ratiometric Fluorescent Protein Biosensors Reveal Citrate Dynamics and Cellular Heterogeneity
Hario, S.; Tamura, N.; Alladin-Mustan, B. S.; Ali, S. M.; Macauley, M. S.; Shen, Y.; Campbell, R. E.; Huppertz, I.; Takahashi-Yamashiro, K.
Show abstract
Citrate is a central intermediate metabolite linking the tricarboxylic acid cycle and lipid biosynthesis. Tools for monitoring of spatiotemporal citrate dynamics are critical for getting a better understanding of cellular metabolism. Here, we develope genetically encoded excitation ratiometric biosensors for citrate, based on our previous intensiometric green fluorescence protein-based citrate biosensor, Citron1. We find that a single mutation in the Citron1 chromophore-forming tripeptide provided an excitation ratiometric response. Further rounds of directed evolution yield highly responsive variants, exhibiting citrate-dependent fluorescence changes between two excitation peaks. When expressed in mammalian cells, these biosensors enable citrate dynamics to be monitored in both the cytosol and mitochondria. Comparative analysis across multiple human breast cancer cell lines uncovers cell line-specific differences in citrate levels and their heterogeneity, which could be linked to their malignancy. Furthermore, flow cytometry-based measurements in mouse embryonic stem cells demonstrate the proteomics signatures underlying the population-level variability in citrate concentrations and citrate rewiring during stem cell differentiation. Together, these results show that these excitation ratiometric citrate biosensors enable quantitative, compartment-resolved, and population-scale analysis of cellular metabolism.
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