Near-infrared PAINT localization microscopy via chromophore replenishment of phytochrome-derived fluorescent tag

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Abstract

Bacterial phytochromes are attractive molecular templates for engineering fluorescent proteins (FPs) because their near-infrared (NIR) emission significantly extends the spectral coverage of GFP-like FPs. Existing phytochrome-based FPs covalently bind heme-derived tetrapyrrole chromophores and exhibit constitutive fluorescence. Here we introduce Rep-miRFP, an NIR imaging probe derived from bacterial phytochrome, which interacts non-covalently and reversibly with biliverdin chromophore. In Rep-miRFP, the photobleached non-covalent adduct can be replenished with fresh biliverdin, restoring fluorescence. By exploiting this chromophore renewal capability, we demonstrate NIR PAINT nanoscopy in mammalian cells using Rep-miRFP.

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Lu, K., Wazawa, T., Matsuda, T., Shcherbakova, D. M., Verkhusha, V. V., & Nagai, T. (2024). Near-infrared PAINT localization microscopy via chromophore replenishment of phytochrome-derived fluorescent tag. Communications Biology, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-024-06169-7

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