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1.
ACS Med Chem Lett ; 7(4): 368-73, 2016 Apr 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27096043

ABSTRACT

Three oligothiophenes were evaluated as PET ligands for the study of local and systemic amyloidosis ex vivo using tissue from patients with amyloid deposits and in vivo using healthy animals and PET-CT. The ex vivo binding studies revealed that all three labeled compounds bound specifically to human amyloid deposits. Specific binding was found in the heart, kidney, liver, and spleen. To verify the specificity of the oligothiophenes toward amyloid deposits, tissue sections with amyloid pathology were stained using the fluorescence exhibited by the compounds and evaluated with multiphoton microscopy. Furthermore, a in vivo monkey PET-CT study showed very low uptake in the brain, pancreas, and heart of the healthy animal indicating low nonspecific binding to healthy tissue. The biological evaluations indicated that this is a promising group of compounds for the visualization of systemic and localized amyloidosis.

2.
Amyloid ; 23(2): 98-108, 2016 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26987044

ABSTRACT

Rapid and accurate detection of amyloid deposits in routine surgical pathology settings are of great importance. The use of fluorescence microscopy in combination with appropriate amyloid specific dyes is very promising in this regard. Here we report that a luminescent conjugated oligothiophene, h-FTAA, rapidly and with high sensitivity and selectivity detects amyloid deposits in verified clinical samples from systemic amyloidosis patients with AA, AL and ATTR types; as well as in tissues laden with localized amyloidosis of AANF, AIAPP and ASem1 type. The probe h-FTAA emitted yellow red fluorescence on binding to amyloid deposits, whereas no apparent staining was observed in surrounding tissue. The only functional structure stained with h-FTAA showing the amyloidotypic fluorescence spectrum was Paneth cell granules in intestine. Screening of 114 amyloid containing tissues derived from 107 verified (Congo red birefringence and/or immunohistochemistry) amyloidosis patients revealed complete correlation between h-FTAA and Congo red fluorescence (107/107, 100% sensitivity). The majority of Congo red negative control cases (27 of 32, 85% specificity) were negative with h-FTAA. Small Congo red negative aggregates in kidney, liver, pancreas and duodenum were found by h-FTAA fluorescence in five control patients aged 72-83 years suffering from diverse diseases. The clinical significance of these false-positive lesions is currently not known. Because h-FTAA fluorescence is one magnitude brighter than Congo red and as the staining is performed four magnitudes lower than the concentration of dye, we believe that these inclusions are beyond detection by Congo red. We conclude that h-FTAA is a fluorescent hypersensitive, rapid and powerful tool for identifying amyloid deposits in tissue sections. Use of h-FTAA can be exploited as a rapid complementary technique for accurate detection of amyloid in routine surgical pathology settings. Our results also implicate the potential of the technique for detection of prodromal amyloidosis as well as for discovery of new amyloid-like protein aggregates in humans.


Subject(s)
Amyloidogenic Proteins/analysis , Amyloidosis/diagnosis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Staining and Labeling/methods , Thiophenes/chemistry , Adult , Aged , Aged, 80 and over , Amyloidogenic Proteins/chemistry , Amyloidosis/classification , Amyloidosis/surgery , Case-Control Studies , Congo Red/chemistry , Cytoplasmic Granules/metabolism , Cytoplasmic Granules/ultrastructure , Duodenum/chemistry , Duodenum/pathology , Duodenum/ultrastructure , False Positive Reactions , Female , Humans , Immunoglobulin Light-chain Amyloidosis , Immunohistochemistry , Kidney/chemistry , Kidney/pathology , Kidney/ultrastructure , Liver/chemistry , Liver/pathology , Liver/ultrastructure , Luminescent Measurements , Male , Middle Aged , Myocardium/chemistry , Myocardium/pathology , Myocardium/ultrastructure , Pancreas/chemistry , Pancreas/pathology , Pancreas/ultrastructure , Paneth Cells/cytology , Paneth Cells/metabolism
3.
Amyloid ; 22(1): 19-25, 2015 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25847117

ABSTRACT

Systemic amyloidosis (SA) is often diagnosed late. Combining clinical and biochemical biomarkers is necessary for raising suspicion of disease. Fine needle aspiration (FNA) of subcutaneous fat enables SA detection by Congo red staining. The luminescent conjugated probe heptameric formic thiophene acetic acid (h-FTAA) is a sensitive alternative to Congo red-staining of tissue samples. Our objective was to compare h-FTAA fluorescence with the Congo red stain for amyloid detection in FNA-obtained fat tissue. Herein, we studied samples from 57 patients with established SA (19 with AA, 20 with AL, and 18 with ATTR) and 17 age-matched controls (34-75 years). Positivity for h-FTAA was graded according to a Congo red-based grading scale ranging from 0 to 4+. Amyloid grading by both methods correlated strongly (r = 0.87). Here h-FTAA was positive in 53 of 54 Congo red-positive cases (sensitivity 98%) and h-FTAA was negative in 7 of 17 Congo red-negative controls (specificity 41%), but was also positive for 3 Congo red-negative SA cases. We conclude that h-FTAA fluorescence is more sensitive than Congo red staining in this small exploratory study of fat tissue samples, implicating potential sensitivity for prodromal amyloidosis, but is less specific for clinical amyloidosis defined by Congo red positivity. Given its simplicity h-FTAA staining may therefore be the most appropriate method for rapid screening of fat tissue samples but should presently treat grade 1+ as only suggestive, whereas 2+ or higher as positive for amyloidosis. Parallel assessment of h-FTAA and Congo red staining appears highly promising for clinical applications.


Subject(s)
Amyloidogenic Proteins/metabolism , Amyloidosis/diagnosis , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Subcutaneous Fat/metabolism , Thiophenes/chemistry , Adult , Aged , Amyloid/metabolism , Amyloidosis/metabolism , Amyloidosis/pathology , Case-Control Studies , Congo Red/chemistry , Female , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Sensitivity and Specificity , Spectrometry, Fluorescence , Staining and Labeling , Subcutaneous Fat/pathology , Young Adult
4.
Prion ; 8(4): 319-29, 2014.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25495506

ABSTRACT

The disease-associated prion protein (PrP) forms aggregates which vary in structural conformation yet share an identical primary sequence. These variations in PrP conformation are believed to manifest in prion strains exhibiting distinctly different periods of disease incubation as well as regionally specific aggregate deposition within the brain. The anionic luminescent conjugated polythiophene (LCP), polythiophene acetic acid (PTAA) has previously been used to distinguish PrP deposits associated with distinct mouse adapted strains via distinct fluorescence emission profiles from the dye. Here, we employed PTAA and 3 structurally related chemically defined luminescent conjugated oligothiophenes (LCOs) to stain brain tissue sections from mice inoculated with 2 distinct prion strains. Our results showed that in addition to emission spectra, excitation, and fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) can fruitfully be assessed for optical distinction of PrP deposits associated with distinct prion strains. Our findings support the theory that alterations in LCP/LCO fluorescence are due to distinct conformational restriction of the thiophene backbone upon interaction with PrP aggregates associated with distinct prion strains. We foresee that LCP and LCO staining in combination with multimodal fluorescence microscopy might aid in detecting structural differences among discrete protein aggregates and in linking protein conformational features with disease phenotypes for a variety of neurodegenerative proteinopathies.


Subject(s)
Brain/pathology , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Prion Diseases/pathology , Prions/analysis , Protein Aggregation, Pathological/pathology , Thiophenes/chemistry , Animals , Ligands , Mice , Microscopy, Fluorescence , Optical Imaging , Protein Aggregates
5.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 34(9): 723-30, 2013 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23468206

ABSTRACT

Fluorescent probes identifying protein aggregates are of great interest, as deposition of aggregated proteins is associated with many devastating diseases. Here, we report that a fluorescent amyloid ligand composed of two distinct molecular moieties, an amyloidophilic pentameric oligothiophene and a porphyrin, can be utilized for spectral and lifetime imaging assessment of recombinant Aß 1-42 amyloid fibrils and Aß deposits in brain tissue sections from a transgenic mouse model with Alzheimer's disease pathology. The enhanced spectral range and distinct lifetime diversity of this novel oligothiophene-porphyrin-based ligand allow a more precise assessment of heterogeneous amyloid morphology compared with the corresponding oligothiophene dye.


Subject(s)
Amyloid beta-Peptides/chemistry , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Peptide Fragments/chemistry , Porphyrins/chemistry , Thiophenes/chemistry , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism , Animals , Disease Models, Animal , Fluorescent Dyes/metabolism , Ligands , Mice , Mice, Transgenic , Peptide Fragments/metabolism , Protein Multimerization
6.
J Chem Biol ; 7(1): 1-15, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24386013

ABSTRACT

The commonly accepted dogma of the bacterial GroE chaperonin system entails protein folding mediated by cycles of several ATP-dependent sequential steps where GroEL interacts with the folding client protein. In contrast, we herein report GroES-mediated dynamic remodeling (expansion and compression) of two different protein substrates during folding: the endogenous substrate MreB and carbonic anhydrase (HCAII), a well-characterized protein folding model. GroES was also found to influence GroEL binding induced unfolding and compression of the client protein underlining the synergistic activity of both chaperonins, even in the absence of ATP. This previously unidentified activity by GroES should have important implications for understanding the chaperonin mechanism and cellular stress response. Our findings necessitate a revision of the GroEL/ES mechanism.

7.
Mol Biosyst ; 7(4): 1232-40, 2011 Apr.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21279219

ABSTRACT

The fluorescence of Nile red (9-diethylamino-5H-benzophenoxazine-5-one) is quenched in aqueous solutions but shows augmented fluorescence in hydrophobic environments. Nile red fluorescence was blue shifted and strongly augmented in the presence of various amyloid fibrils assayed under acidic as well as neutral pH conditions. Fibrils grown from lysozyme and insulin (at pH 1.6 and 65 °C), transthyretin (TTR) fibrils grown from the acid unfolded monomer (pH 2.0, 21 °C) or from the dissociated tetramer starting from native protein under less acidic conditions (pH 4.4, 37 °C) were detected. Nile red was also successfully employed in detecting Aß1-42 and human prion protein (PrP90-231) amyloid fibrils grown at neutral pH. Nile red was amyloid fibril specific and did not fluoresce appreciably in the presence of the monomeric precursor proteins. Stoke's shifts of the wavelength maximum of Nile red bound to various fibrils were different (ranging from 615 nm to 638 nm) indicating sensitivity to the tertiary structure in its respective binding sites of different amyloid proteins. A polarity assay using ethanol-water mixtures and pure octanol ranging from dielectric constants between 10 and 70 showed a linear correlation of Nile red Stoke's shift and allowed assignment of amyloid fibril binding site polarity. Fluorescence resonance energy transfer between Thioflavin T (ThT) and Nile red was proven to be efficient and co-staining was employed to discriminate between conformational isoforms of Aß1-42 amyloid fibrils grown under agitated and quiescent conditions. This paper demonstrates the complementary use of this fluorometric method for conformational typing of amyloid structures.


Subject(s)
Amyloid/metabolism , Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer , Oxazines , Benzothiazoles , Binding Sites , Humans , Hydrogen-Ion Concentration , Kinetics , Microscopy , Muramidase/metabolism , Oxazines/chemistry , Oxazines/metabolism , Prealbumin , Protein Binding , Staining and Labeling , Thiazoles/metabolism
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