Kiernan J A
Department of Anatomy and Cell Biology, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario, Canada.
Biotech Histochem. 2007 Apr;82(2):73-103. doi: 10.1080/10520290701375278.
Indoxyl esters and glycosides are useful chromogenic substrates for detecting enzyme activities in histochemistry, biochemistry and bacteriology. The chemical reactions exploited in the laboratory are similar to those that generate indigoid dyes from indoxyl-beta-d-glucoside and isatans (in certain plants), indoxyl sulfate (in urine), and 6-bromo-2-S-methylindoxyl sulfate (in certain molluscs). Pairs of indoxyl molecules released from these precursors react rapidly with oxygen to yield insoluble blue indigo (or purple 6,6'-dibromoindigo) and smaller amounts of other indigoid dyes. Our understanding of indigogenic substrates was developed from studies of the hydrolysis of variously substituted indoxyl acetates for use in enzyme histochemistry. The smallest dye particles, with least diffusion from the sites of hydrolysis, are obtained from 5-bromo-, 5-bromo-6-chloro- and 5-bromo-4-chloroindoxyl acetates, especially the last of these three. Oxidation of the diffusible indoxyls to insoluble indigoid dyes must occur rapidly. This is achieved with atmospheric oxygen and an equimolar mixture of K(3)Fe(CN)(6) and K(4)Fe(CN)(6), which has a catalytic function. H(2)O(2) is a by-product of the oxidation of indoxyl by oxygen. In the absence of a catalyst, the indoxyl diffuses and is oxidized by H(2)O(2) (catalyzed by peroxidase-like proteins) in sites different from those of the esterase activity. The concentration of K(3)Fe(CN)(6)/K(4)Fe(CN)(6) in a histochemical medium should be as low as possible because this mixture inhibits some enzymes and also promotes parallel formation from the indoxyl of soluble yellow oxidation products. The identities and positions of halogen substituents in the indoxyl moiety of a substrate determine the color and the physical properties of the resulting indigoid dye. The principles of indigogenic histochemistry learned from the study of esterases are applicable to methods for localization of other enzymes, because all indoxyl substrates release the same type of chromogenic product. Substrates are commercially available for a wide range of carboxylic esterases, phosphatases, phosphodiesterases, aryl sulfatase and several glycosidases. Indigogenic methods for carboxylic esterases have low substrate specificity and are used in conjunction with specific inhibitors of different enzymes of the group. Indigogenic methods for acid and alkaline phosphatases, phosphodiesterases and aryl sulfatase generally have been unsatisfactory; other histochemical techniques are preferred for these enzymes. Indigogenic methods are widely used, however, for glycosidases. The technique for beta-galactosidase activity, using 5-bromo-4-chloroindoxyl-beta-galactoside (X-gal) is applied to microbial cultures, cell cultures and tissues that contain the reporter gene lac-z derived from E. coli. This bacterial enzyme has a higher pH optimum than the lysosomal beta-galactosidase of animal cells. In plants, the preferred reporter gene is gus, which encodes beta-glucuronidase activity and is also demonstrable by indigogenic histochemistry. Indoxyl substrates also are used to localize enzyme activities in non-indigogenic techniques. In indoxyl-azo methods, the released indoxyl couples with a diazonium salt to form an azo dye. In indoxyl-tetrazolium methods, the oxidizing agent is a tetrazolium salt, which is reduced by the indoxyl to an insoluble coloured formazan. Indoxyl-tetrazolium methods operate only at high pH; the method for alkaline phosphatase is used extensively to detect this enzyme as a label in immunohistochemistry and in Western blots. The insolubility of indigoid dyes in water limits the use of indigogenic substrates in biochemical assays for enzymes, but the intermediate indoxyl and leucoindigo compounds are strongly fluorescent, and this property is exploited in a variety of sensitive assays for hydrolases. The most commonly used substrates for this purpose are glycosides and carboxylic and phosphate esters of N-methylindoxyl. Indigogenic enzyme substrates are among many chromogenic reagents used to facilitate the identification of cultured bacteria. An indoxyl substrate must be transported into the organisms by a permease to detect intracellular enzymes, as in the blue/white test for recognizing E. coli colonies that do or do not express the lac-z gene. Secreted enzymes are detected by substrate-impregnated disks or strips applied to the surfaces of cultures. Such devices often include several reagents, including indigogenic substrates for esterases, glycosidases and DNAse.
吲哚酚酯和糖苷是用于在组织化学、生物化学和细菌学中检测酶活性的有用显色底物。实验室中利用的化学反应类似于从吲哚酚-β-D-葡萄糖苷和异吲哚酮(在某些植物中)、硫酸吲哚酚(在尿液中)以及6-溴-2-S-甲基硫酸吲哚酚(在某些软体动物中)生成靛蓝染料的反应。从这些前体释放的成对吲哚酚分子与氧气迅速反应,生成不溶性蓝色靛蓝(或紫色6,6'-二溴靛蓝)和少量其他靛蓝染料。我们对产靛底物的理解源于对用于酶组织化学的各种取代吲哚酚乙酸酯水解的研究。从5-溴-、5-溴-6-氯-和5-溴-4-氯吲哚酚乙酸酯,尤其是这三种中的最后一种,可获得水解位点扩散最少的最小染料颗粒。可扩散的吲哚酚氧化为不溶性靛蓝染料必须迅速发生。这可通过大气中的氧气以及具有催化功能的K(3)Fe(CN)(6)和K(4)Fe(CN)(6)等摩尔混合物来实现。H(2)O(2)是氧气氧化吲哚酚的副产物。在没有催化剂的情况下,吲哚酚会扩散并在与酯酶活性不同的位点被H(2)O(2)(由类过氧化物酶蛋白催化)氧化。组织化学介质中K(3)Fe(CN)(6)/K(4)Fe(CN)(6)的浓度应尽可能低,因为这种混合物会抑制某些酶,还会促进吲哚酚形成可溶性黄色氧化产物的平行反应。底物吲哚酚部分中卤素取代基的身份和位置决定了所得靛蓝染料的颜色和物理性质。从酯酶研究中学到的产靛组织化学原理适用于其他酶的定位方法,因为所有吲哚酚底物都会释放相同类型的显色产物。市面上有适用于多种羧酸酯酶、磷酸酶、磷酸二酯酶、芳基硫酸酯酶和几种糖苷酶的底物。羧酸酯酶的产靛方法底物特异性低,通常与该组不同酶的特异性抑制剂结合使用。酸性和碱性磷酸酶、磷酸二酯酶和芳基硫酸酯酶的产靛方法通常不太令人满意;这些酶更倾向于使用其他组织化学技术。然而,产靛方法广泛用于糖苷酶。使用5-溴-4-氯吲哚酚-β-半乳糖苷(X-gal)检测β-半乳糖苷酶活性的技术应用于含有源自大肠杆菌的报告基因lac-z的微生物培养物、细胞培养物和组织。这种细菌酶的最适pH值高于动物细胞的溶酶体β-半乳糖苷酶。在植物中,首选的报告基因是gus,它编码β-葡萄糖醛酸酶活性,也可通过产靛组织化学进行检测。吲哚酚底物也用于非产靛技术中酶活性的定位。在吲哚酚-偶氮方法中,释放的吲哚酚与重氮盐偶联形成偶氮染料。在吲哚酚-四氮唑方法中,氧化剂是四氮唑盐,它被吲哚酚还原为不溶性有色甲臜。吲哚酚-四氮唑方法仅在高pH值下运行;碱性磷酸酶的方法广泛用于在免疫组织化学和蛋白质印迹中检测该酶作为标记。靛蓝染料在水中的不溶性限制了产靛底物在酶生化测定中的使用,但中间的吲哚酚和无色靛蓝化合物具有强荧光,这种特性被用于多种水解酶的灵敏测定中。为此目的最常用的底物是糖苷以及N-甲基吲哚酚的羧酸酯和磷酸酯。产靛酶底物是用于促进培养细菌鉴定的众多显色试剂之一。吲哚酚底物必须通过通透酶转运到生物体中以检测细胞内酶,如在识别表达或不表达lac-z基因的大肠杆菌菌落的蓝/白试验中。分泌的酶通过应用于培养物表面的底物浸渍圆盘或试纸条进行检测。此类装置通常包括几种试剂,包括酯酶、糖苷酶和DNA酶的产靛底物。