Abstract
ABSTRACTSelectively labelling cells with damaged membranes is needed in contexts as simple as identifying dead cells in culture, or as complex as imaging membrane barrier functionalityin vivo. The commonly used dyes are permanently coloured/fluorescent dyes that are simply excluded by intact membranes, but to achieve good image contrast therefore requires removing their extracellular signal by washing or background subtraction, which are not possiblein vivo. Here, we develop fluorogenic probes which sensitively and selectively reveal damaged cells, without needing washing steps since their fluorescence turns on from near-zero background. From a set of novel fluorogenic probes impermeabilised by sulfonations along different vectors, we identify a specific disulfonated fluorogenic scaffold that enters cells only upon membrane damage, where it is enzymatically activated to mark them. The esterase probeiPS-FS2is a reliable tool to reveal live cells that have been permeabilised by biological, biochemical, or physical membrane damage; and it can be used in multicolour microscopy. We confirm the modularity of this approach by also adapting it for redox-unmasked cell-excluded probes with improved hydrolytic stability. This scaffold-based design thus provides tools for wash-freein vivoimaging of membrane damage, which is relevant across many pathologies. The insightss gained from these probes should also be translatable to damage-targeted prodrugs, for selective therapy of membrane-compromised cells.Abstract Figure
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory