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For all three fluorescent dyes used the double labeled
For all three fluorescent dyes used, the double-labeled UQ-bodies showed higher antigen responses. A plausible mechanism for the higher quenching observed for the double-labeled UQ-bodies is the dye-dye quenching due to H-dimer formation [19] between the two dyes introduced into the Fd and L chains. More specifically, the double ATTO520-labeled UQ-body showed higher response than the double TAMRA-labeled UQ-bodies. Compared with TAMRA-C5 labeled UQ-body, ATTO520-labeled UQ-body has a lower tendency to form stable H-dimers [3]. Although H-dimer formation is important for the efficient quenching of double-labeled UQ-bodies, if the formed dimer is too stable, it can affect the UQ-body's sensitivity and response, because the dye-dye interaction competes with antigen binding. Probably, the stronger H-dimer formed using TAMRA was more inhibitory to antigen binding as observed in ELISA signals (Figs. S1B and S2B), suggesting ATTO520 as a more suitable label.
By contrast, the quenching of a single dye incorporated into an UQ-body is considered to occur solely by the Trp residues in its variable region through a photoinduced electron transfer mechanism [1,[20], [21], [22]]. According to the amino CHZ868 sequences, in the variable region of h12A11, there are five Trp residues in Fd and one in the L chain. Some of these Trp residues directly or indirectly interact with the fluorescent dye, and provide electrons to the excited dye, resulting in the molecule returning to its ground state without emitting fluorescence.
Currently, bioimaging of live cells is a challenging task for biotechnologists and analytical chemists, because at least one washing step is necessary to remove the background fluorescence signal. In this study, we demonstrated that UQ-bodies could be used to stain Aβ samples without any wash steps. Given that aggregation of Aβ is formed mainly on the cell surface, it might also be possible that UQ-body could detect the target localized on the cellular membrane in vivo. On the other hand, since the concentration of the Aβ in body fluid is relatively low (pM ∼ sub nM range [23]), enrichment of such samples would enable effective detection. Taken together, the results suggested the utility of the UQ-bodies as useful tools to study the process of Aβ oligomerization and its application in AD diagnosis.
Funding source
This work was supported partly by a Developing Research Grant from the Nakatani Foundation, Japan; by JSPS KAKENHI (Grant Numbers JP15H04191, JP18H03851, and JP26420793) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, Japan; by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (Grant Number: 21775064) and Shandong Provincial Natural Science Foundation (Grant Number: ZR2017MB037).
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Protein aggregation is a pathological hallmark of many neurodegenerative disorders such as amyloid-β (Aβ) plaques and tau tangles in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and α-synuclein containing Lewy bodies in Parkinson's disease (PD). However, how these proteins aggregate and spread throughout the brain remain poorly understood. A hypothesis that has been gaining traction the last decade is that these disease-linked proteins have prion-like properties. Prions are potentially infectious proteins that are capable of misfolding and aggregating (forming amyloid), inducing homologous proteins to misfold and, crucially, can spread and induce misfolding throughout the brain and even between organisms. There is evidence that α-synuclein pathology might spread from host to graft in PD patients who received embryonic stem cell grafts (Kordower et al., 2008; Li et al., 2008) and between cells in culture (Hansen et al., 2011). Moreover, treatment with fibrillar α-synuclein can seed intracellular inclusions in α-synuclein expressing cells (Luk et al., 2009) and intracerebral injection of pathological α-synuclein into α-synuclein expressing mice accelerated formation of Lewy bodies and neurites (Luk et al., 2012). Tau has also been shown to spread between cells in culture (Holmes et al., 2013). Intracellular tau inclusions can be formed after addition of fibrillar tau to tau-fragment expressing HEK-293 cells, and injecting these cells into the brains of transgenic tau mice induced tau pathology (Sanders et al., 2014). For Aβ, studies have shown that intracerebral injections of AD brain material in familial AD (FAD) transgenic mice accelerate amyloid pathology and that it is specifically Aβ that causes this as immuno-depletion of Aβ abolishes seeding activity (Kane et al., 2000; Meyer-Luehmann et al., 2006). Remarkably, as little as a femtogram of PBS soluble AD brain derived Aβ can seed pathology in a FAD mouse (Fritschi et al., 2014). In contrast, much larger amounts of synthetic Aβ either fail to seed plaques (Meyer-Luehmann et al., 2006) or require nitration or 72 h of agitation of the synthetic Aβ to augment pathology (Kummer et al., 2011; Stöhr et al., 2012). It appears that only particular form(s) of Aβ that is (are) present in AD but not normal brains are capable of seeding pathology, albeit in remarkably low quantities. On the basis of these findings it has been argued that Aβ is a prion-like protein (Frost and Diamond, 2010; Jucker and Walker, 2011; Morales et al., 2015). Understanding where “prion-like” Aβ can form and its structure would then be important for understanding the pathogenesis of AD.