Acc Chem Res. 2019 Nov 19;52(11):3039-3050. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.9b00391. Epub 2019 Oct 8.
Bioluminescence is widely used for real-time imaging in living organisms. This technology features a light-emitting reaction between enzymes (luciferases) and small molecule substrates (luciferins). Photons produced from luciferase-luciferin reactions can penetrate through heterogeneous tissue, enabling readouts of physiological processes. Dozens of bioluminescent probes are now available and many are routinely used to monitor cell proliferation, migration, and gene expression patterns . Despite the ubiquity of bioluminescence, traditional applications have been largely limited to imaging one biological feature at a time. Only a handful of luciferase-luciferin pairs can be easily used in tandem, and most are poorly resolved in living animals. Efforts to develop spectrally distinct reporters have been successful, but multispectral imaging in large organisms remains a formidable challenge due to interference from surrounding tissue. Consequently, a lack of well-resolved probes has precluded multicomponent tracking. An expanded collection of bioluminescent probes would provide insight into processes where multiple cell types drive physiological tasks, including immune function and organ development. We aimed to expand the bioluminescent toolkit by developing resolved imaging agents. The goal was to generate multiple orthogonal (i.e., noncross-reactive) luciferases that are responsive to unique scaffolds and could be used concurrently in living animals. We adopted a parallel engineering approach to genetically modify luciferases to accept chemically modified luciferins. When the mutants and analogs are combined, light is produced only when complementary enzyme-substrate partners interact. Thus, the pairs can be distinguished based on substrate selectivity, regardless of the color of light emitted. Sequential administration of the luciferins enables the unique luciferases to be illuminated (and thus resolved) within complex environments, including whole organisms. This Account describes our efforts to develop orthogonal bioluminescent probes, crafting custom luciferases (or "biological flashlights") that can selectively process luciferin analogs (or "batteries") to produce light. In the first section, we describe synthetic methods that were key to accessing diverse luciferin architectures. The second section focuses on identifying complementary luciferase enzymes via a combination of mutagenesis and screening. To expedite the search for orthogonal enzymes and substrates, we developed a computational algorithm to sift through large data sets. The third section features examples of the parallel engineering approach. We identified orthogonal enzyme-substrate pairs comprising two different classes of luciferins. The probes were vetted both in cells and whole organisms. This expanded collection of imaging agents is applicable to studies of immune function and other multicomponent processes. The final section of the Account highlights ongoing work toward building better bioluminescent tools. As ever-brighter and more selective probes are developed, the frontiers of what we can "see" will continue to expand.
生物发光被广泛应用于活体生物的实时成像。该技术具有酶(荧光素酶)和小分子底物(荧光素)之间的发光反应的特点。荧光素酶-荧光素反应产生的光子可以穿透异质组织,使生理过程的读数成为可能。现在有数十种生物发光探针可用,其中许多被常规用于监测细胞增殖、迁移和基因表达模式。尽管生物发光无处不在,但传统的应用在很大程度上仅限于一次成像一个生物特征。只有少数几个荧光素酶-荧光素对可以很容易地串联使用,而且大多数在活体动物中分辨率都很差。开发光谱上有区别的报告基因的努力已经取得成功,但由于周围组织的干扰,在大型生物体中进行多光谱成像仍然是一个艰巨的挑战。因此,缺乏分辨率高的探针使得多成分跟踪变得不可能。扩展的生物发光探针集合将为多个细胞类型驱动生理任务(包括免疫功能和器官发育)的过程提供深入了解。我们旨在通过开发分辨率成像剂来扩展生物发光工具包。目标是生成多个正交(即非交叉反应)的荧光素酶,这些荧光素酶对独特的支架有反应,并可在活体动物中同时使用。我们采用平行工程方法对荧光素酶进行基因修饰,使其能够接受化学修饰的荧光素。当突变体和类似物结合时,只有互补的酶-底物相互作用时才会产生光。因此,无论发射光的颜色如何,都可以根据底物选择性来区分这些对。顺序给予荧光素可以使独特的荧光素酶在复杂环境中(包括整个生物体)被照亮(从而被分辨)。本报告描述了我们开发正交生物发光探针的努力,设计了定制的荧光素酶(或“生物闪光灯”),这些酶可以选择性地处理荧光素类似物(或“电池”)以产生光。在第一节中,我们描述了访问各种荧光素结构的关键合成方法。第二节重点介绍了通过突变和筛选相结合来确定互补荧光素酶的方法。为了加快寻找正交酶和底物的速度,我们开发了一种计算算法来筛选大数据集。第三节介绍了平行工程方法的例子。我们确定了由两种不同类别的荧光素组成的正交酶-底物对。探针在细胞和整个生物体中都经过了验证。这种扩展的成像剂集合适用于免疫功能和其他多成分过程的研究。本报告的最后一节重点介绍了朝着构建更好的生物发光工具的持续工作。随着更亮、更具选择性的探针的开发,我们能够“看到”的范围将继续扩大。