Reactive oxygen species (ROS) like hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) are transient species that have broad actions in signaling and stress, but spatioanatomical understanding of their biology remains insufficient. Here, we report a tandem activity-based sensing and labeling strategy for H2O2 imaging that enables capture and permanent recording of localized H2O2 fluxes. Peroxy Green-1 Fluoromethyl (PG1-FM) is a diffusible small-molecule probe that senses H2O2 by a boronate oxidation reaction to trigger dual release and covalent labeling of a fluorescent product, thus preserving spatial information on local H2O2 changes. This unique reagent enables visualization of transcellular redox signaling in a microglia-neuron coculture cell model, where selective activation of microglia for ROS production increases H2O2 in nearby neurons. In addition to identifying ROS-mediated cell-to-cell communication, this work provides a starting point for the design of chemical probes that can achieve high spatial fidelity by combining activity-based sensing and labeling strategies.
CITATION STYLE
Iwashita, H., Castillo, E., Messina, M. S., Swanson, R. A., & Chang, C. J. (2021). A tandem activity-based sensing and labeling strategy enables imaging of transcellular hydrogen peroxide signaling. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 118(9). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2018513118
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