Visualizing secretion and synaptic transmission with pH-sensitive green fluorescent proteins
- 1 July 1998
- journal article
- letter
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature
- Vol. 394 (6689), 192-195
- https://doi.org/10.1038/28190
Abstract
In neural systems, information is often carried by ensembles of cells rather than by individual units. Optical indicators1 provide a powerful means to reveal such distributed activity, particularly when protein-based and encodable in DNA2,3,4: encodable probes can be introduced into cells, tissues, or transgenic organisms by genetic manipulation, selectively expressed in anatomically or functionally defined groups of cells, and, ideally, recorded in situ, without a requirement for exogenous cofactors. Here we describe sensors for secretion and neurotransmission that fulfil these criteria. We have developed pH-sensitive mutants of green fluorescent protein (‘pHluorins’) by structure-directed combinatorial mutagenesis, with the aim of exploiting the acidic pH inside secretory vesicles5,6 to monitor vesicle exocytosis and recycling. When linked to a vesicle membrane protein, pHluorins were sorted to secretory and synaptic vesicles and reported transmission at individual synaptic boutons, as well as secretion and fusion pore ‘flicker’ of single secretory granules.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Mutations that suppress the thermosensitivity of green fluorescent proteinCurrent Biology, 1996
- Crystal Structure of the Aequorea victoria Green Fluorescent ProteinScience, 1996
- Engineering green fluorescent protein for improved brightness, longer wavelengths and fluorescence resonance energy transferCurrent Biology, 1996
- Green‐fluorescent protein mutants with altered fluorescence excitation spectraFEBS Letters, 1995
- Estimates for the pool size of releasable quanta at a single central synapse and for the time required to refill the pool.Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 1995
- Insulin resistance, diabetes, and the insulin-regulated trafficking of GLUT-4.The Journal of cell biology, 1994
- Cellubrevin is a ubiquitous tetanus-toxin substrate homologous to a putative synaptic vesicle fusion proteinNature, 1993
- Signal transduction by receptors with tyrosine kinase activityCell, 1990
- Signal for Attachment of a Phospholipid Membrane Anchor in Decay Accelerating FactorScience, 1987
- Arrest of membrane fusion events in mast cells by quick-freezing.The Journal of cell biology, 1980