Quantifying Protein-Protein Interactions using Confined Photoconversion and Single-Particle Tracking

ORAL

Abstract

Single particle tracking (SPT) has become a powerful tool to investigate the dynamics of single molecules in live cells. Typical SPT measurement require sparsely labeled molecules in order to identify and localize the individual molecules. This low density limits the rate at which diffusion-limited reactions can be observed. We are developing a novel technique that increases the rate of observable interactions by two orders of magnitude. We call this method SPT-REversible Saturable OpticaL Fluorescence Transitions (SPT-RESOLFT) because it uses a concept from the RESOLFT super-resolution method. The concept relies on saturated labeling and selectively imaging proteins of interest within roughly 100 nm spot. Fluorophores are activated using diffraction-limited Gaussian beam and deactivated outside of 100 nm by a Laguerre-Gauss donut beam. We experimentally demonstrate the concept using EGFR-mEos4b, which form dimers with ~ 1 s lifetimes, and with the gamma subunit of FceR1, gamma-mEos4b, which forms stable dimers.

Presenters

  • Sajjad A Khan

    The University of New Mexico

Authors

  • Sajjad A Khan

    The University of New Mexico

  • David Schodt

    The University of New Mexico, University of New Mexico

  • Diane S. Lidke

    University of New Mexico, The University of New Mexico School of Medicine

  • Keith Lidke

    The University of New Mexico, University of New Mexico