Litcius/Paper detail

Live‐Cell Imaging of Sterculic Acid—a Naturally Occurring 1,2‐Cyclopropene Fatty Acid—by Bioorthogonal Reaction with Turn‐On Tetrazine‐Fluorophore Conjugates**

Kristine Bertheussen, Merel van de Plassche, Thomas Bakkum, Berend Gagestein, Iakovia Ttofi, Alexi J. C. Sarris, Herman S. Overkleeft, Mario van der Stelt, Sander I. van Kasteren

2022Angewandte Chemie International Edition33 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the field of lipid research, bioorthogonal chemistry has made the study of lipid uptake and processing in living systems possible, whilst minimising biological properties arising from detectable pendant groups. To allow the study of unsaturated free fatty acids in live cells, we here report the use of sterculic acid, a 1,2-cyclopropene-containing oleic acid analogue, as a bioorthogonal probe. We show that this lipid can be readily taken up by dendritic cells without toxic side effects, and that it can subsequently be visualised using an inverse electron-demand Diels-Alder reaction with quenched tetrazine-fluorophore conjugates. In addition, the lipid can be used to identify changes in protein oleoylation after immune cell activation. Finally, this reaction can be integrated into a multiplexed bioorthogonal reaction workflow by combining it with two sequential copper-catalysed Huisgen ligation reactions. This allows for the study of multiple biomolecules in the cell simultaneously by multimodal confocal imaging.

Topics & Concepts

Bioorthogonal chemistryTetrazineCyclopropeneChemistryFluorophoreClick chemistryConjugateBiomoleculeLive cell imagingCombinatorial chemistryBiochemistryFluorescenceOrganic chemistryCellMathematical analysisMathematicsQuantum mechanicsPhysicsClick Chemistry and ApplicationsProtein Degradation and InhibitorsMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies Research