posted on 2015-12-16, 21:10authored byNelson
B. Cole, Julie G. Donaldson
Site-specific labeling of cellular proteins with chemical
probes
is a powerful tool for live cell imaging of biological processes.
One popular system, known as the SNAP-tag, is based on an engineered
variant of the 20-kDa DNA repair protein O6-alkylguanine-DNA-alkyltransferase (AGT) that covalently reacts with O6-benzylguanine (BG) and can be derivatized
with a number of reporter groups. For studying the endocytosis and
recycling of cell surface proteins, the covalent nature of BG binding
to the SNAP-tag is problematic, since removing excess noninternalized
probe from the cell surface is not feasible. Here we describe a modification
of the SNAP-tag technology that permits the rapid release of fluorescently
labeled probes from the cell surface without affecting the population
of labeled molecules sequestered within endosomes. This simple yet
effective approach allows quantitative measurements of endocytosis
and recycling in both imaging and biochemical assays and is especially
useful when studying endosomal dynamics in live cells.