4.8 Article

A genetically targetable near-infrared photosensitizer

Journal

NATURE METHODS
Volume 13, Issue 3, Pages 263-+

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NMETH.3735

Keywords

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Funding

  1. US National Institutes of Health (NIH), Technology Centers for Networks and Pathways program [U54GM103529]
  2. NIH [R01EB017268, R21ES025606]

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Upon illumination, photosensitizer molecules produce reactive oxygen species that can be used for functional manipulation of living cells, including protein inactivation, targeted-damage introduction and cellular ablation. Photosensitizers used to date have been either exogenous, resulting in delivery and removal challenges, or genetically encoded proteins that form or bind a native photosensitizing molecule, resulting in a constitutively active photosensitizer inside the cell. We describe a genetically encoded fluorogen-activating protein (FAP) that binds a heavy atom-substituted fluorogenic dye, forming an 'on-demand' activated photosensitizer that produces singlet oxygen and fluorescence when activated with near-infrared light. This targeted and activated photosensitizer (TAPs) approach enables protein inactivation, targeted cell killing and rapid targeted lineage ablation in living larval and adult zebrafish. The near-infrared excitation and emission of this FAP-TAPs provides a new spectral range for photosensitizer proteins that could be useful for imaging, manipulation and cellular ablation deep within living organisms.

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