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Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models

In addition to their degradative role in protein turnover, proteases play a key role as positive or negative regulators of signal transduction pathways and therefore their dysregulation contributes to many disease states. Regulatory roles of proteases include their hormone-like role in triggering G...

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Autores principales: Galbán, Stefanie, Jeon, Yong Hyun, Bowman, Brittany M., Stevenson, James, Sebolt, Katrina A., Sharkey, Lisa M., Lafferty, Michael, Hoff, Benjamin A., Butler, Braeden L., Wigdal, Susan S., Binkowski, Brock F., Otto, Paul, Zimmerman, Kris, Vidugiris, Gediminas, Encell, Lance P., Fan, Frank, Wood, Keith V., Galbán, Craig J., Ross, Brian D., Rehemtulla, Alnawaz
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3679058/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23776643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066248
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author Galbán, Stefanie
Jeon, Yong Hyun
Bowman, Brittany M.
Stevenson, James
Sebolt, Katrina A.
Sharkey, Lisa M.
Lafferty, Michael
Hoff, Benjamin A.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wigdal, Susan S.
Binkowski, Brock F.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kris
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Encell, Lance P.
Fan, Frank
Wood, Keith V.
Galbán, Craig J.
Ross, Brian D.
Rehemtulla, Alnawaz
author_facet Galbán, Stefanie
Jeon, Yong Hyun
Bowman, Brittany M.
Stevenson, James
Sebolt, Katrina A.
Sharkey, Lisa M.
Lafferty, Michael
Hoff, Benjamin A.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wigdal, Susan S.
Binkowski, Brock F.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kris
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Encell, Lance P.
Fan, Frank
Wood, Keith V.
Galbán, Craig J.
Ross, Brian D.
Rehemtulla, Alnawaz
author_sort Galbán, Stefanie
collection PubMed
description In addition to their degradative role in protein turnover, proteases play a key role as positive or negative regulators of signal transduction pathways and therefore their dysregulation contributes to many disease states. Regulatory roles of proteases include their hormone-like role in triggering G protein-coupled signaling (Protease-Activated-Receptors); their role in shedding of ligands such as EGF, Notch and Fas; and their role in signaling events that lead to apoptotic cell death. Dysregulated activation of apoptosis by the caspase family of proteases has been linked to diseases such as cancer, autoimmunity and inflammation. In an effort to better understand the role of proteases in health and disease, a luciferase biosensor is described which can quantitatively report proteolytic activity in live cells and mouse models. The biosensor, hereafter referred to as GloSensor Caspase 3/7 has a robust signal to noise (50–100 fold) and dynamic range such that it can be used to screen for pharmacologically active compounds in high throughput campaigns as well as to study cell signaling in rare cell populations such as isolated cancer stem cells. The biosensor can also be used in the context of genetically engineered mouse models of human disease wherein conditional expression using the Cre/loxP technology can be implemented to investigate the role of a specific protease in living subjects. While the regulation of apoptosis by caspase's was used as an example in these studies, biosensors to study additional proteases involved in the regulation of normal and pathological cellular processes can be designed using the concepts presented herein.
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spelling pubmed-36790582013-06-17 Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models Galbán, Stefanie Jeon, Yong Hyun Bowman, Brittany M. Stevenson, James Sebolt, Katrina A. Sharkey, Lisa M. Lafferty, Michael Hoff, Benjamin A. Butler, Braeden L. Wigdal, Susan S. Binkowski, Brock F. Otto, Paul Zimmerman, Kris Vidugiris, Gediminas Encell, Lance P. Fan, Frank Wood, Keith V. Galbán, Craig J. Ross, Brian D. Rehemtulla, Alnawaz PLoS One Research Article In addition to their degradative role in protein turnover, proteases play a key role as positive or negative regulators of signal transduction pathways and therefore their dysregulation contributes to many disease states. Regulatory roles of proteases include their hormone-like role in triggering G protein-coupled signaling (Protease-Activated-Receptors); their role in shedding of ligands such as EGF, Notch and Fas; and their role in signaling events that lead to apoptotic cell death. Dysregulated activation of apoptosis by the caspase family of proteases has been linked to diseases such as cancer, autoimmunity and inflammation. In an effort to better understand the role of proteases in health and disease, a luciferase biosensor is described which can quantitatively report proteolytic activity in live cells and mouse models. The biosensor, hereafter referred to as GloSensor Caspase 3/7 has a robust signal to noise (50–100 fold) and dynamic range such that it can be used to screen for pharmacologically active compounds in high throughput campaigns as well as to study cell signaling in rare cell populations such as isolated cancer stem cells. The biosensor can also be used in the context of genetically engineered mouse models of human disease wherein conditional expression using the Cre/loxP technology can be implemented to investigate the role of a specific protease in living subjects. While the regulation of apoptosis by caspase's was used as an example in these studies, biosensors to study additional proteases involved in the regulation of normal and pathological cellular processes can be designed using the concepts presented herein. Public Library of Science 2013-06-11 /pmc/articles/PMC3679058/ /pubmed/23776643 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066248 Text en © 2013 Galbán et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Galbán, Stefanie
Jeon, Yong Hyun
Bowman, Brittany M.
Stevenson, James
Sebolt, Katrina A.
Sharkey, Lisa M.
Lafferty, Michael
Hoff, Benjamin A.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wigdal, Susan S.
Binkowski, Brock F.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kris
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Encell, Lance P.
Fan, Frank
Wood, Keith V.
Galbán, Craig J.
Ross, Brian D.
Rehemtulla, Alnawaz
Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title_full Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title_fullStr Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title_full_unstemmed Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title_short Imaging Proteolytic Activity in Live Cells and Animal Models
title_sort imaging proteolytic activity in live cells and animal models
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3679058/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23776643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0066248
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