Abstract
Protein aggregation is a biological phenomenon in which aberrantly processed or mutant proteins misfold and assemble into a variety of insoluble aggregates. Decades of studies have delineated the structure, interaction, and activity of proteins in either their natively folded structures or insoluble aggregates such as amyloid fibrils. However, a variety of intermediate species exist between these two extreme states in the protein folding landscape. Herein, we collectively term these intermediate species as misfolded protein oligomers, including soluble oligomers and preamyloid oligomers that are formed by unfolded or misfolded proteins. While extensive tools have been developed to study folded proteins or amyloid fibrils, research to understand the properties and activities of misfolded protein oligomers has been limited by the lack of methods to detect and interrogate these species in live cells.In this Account, we describe our efforts in the development of chemical methods that allow for the characterization of the multistep protein aggregation process, in particular the misfolded protein oligomers, in living cells. As the start of this journey, we attempted to develop a fluorogenic method wherein the misfolded oligomers could turn on the fluorescence of chemical probes that are conjugated to the protein-of-interest (POI). To this end, we produced a series of destabilized HaloTag variants, formulating the primary component of the AgHalo sensor, which misfolds and aggregates when cells are subjected to stress. When AgHalo is covalently conjugated with a solvatochromic fluorophore, misfolding of the AgHalo conjugate would activate fluorescence, resulting in the observation of misfolded oligomers. Following this work, we extended the scope of detection from AgHalo to any protein-of-interest via the AggTag method, wherein the POIs are genetically fused to self-labeling protein tags (HaloTag or SNAP-tag). Focusing on the molecular rotor-based fluorophores, we applied the modulated fluorescent protein (FP) chromophore core as a prototype for the AggTag probes, to enable the fluorogenic detection of misfolded soluble oligomers of multiple proteins in live cells. Next, we further developed the AggTag method to distinguish insoluble aggregates from misfolded oligomers, using two classes of probes that activate different fluorescence emission toward these two conformations. To enable this goal, we applied physical organic chemistry and computational chemistry to discover a new category of triode-like fluorophores, wherein the π orbitals of either an electron density regulator or the donor-acceptor linkages are used to control the rotational barriers of fluorophores in the excited states. This mechanism allows us to rationally design molecular rotor-based fluorophores that have desired responses to viscosity, thus extending the application of the AggTag method.In summary, our work allows the direct monitoring of the misfolded protein oligomers and differentiation of insoluble aggregates from other conformations in live cells, thus enabling studies of many currently unanswered questions in protein aggregation. Future directions are to develop methods that enable quantitative analyses of the protein aggregation process. Further, new methods are needed to detect and to quantify the formation and maturation of protein or RNA condensates that form membraneless organelles.
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