Abstract
Potassium is the most abundant intracellular
metal in the body, playing vital roles in regulating intracellular fluid volume,
nutrient transport, and cell-to-cell communication through nerve and muscle
contraction. On the other hand, aberrant alterations in K+
homeostasis contribute to a diverse array of diseases spanning cardiovascular
and neurological disorders to diabetes to kidney disease to cancer. Owing to
the large differences in intracellular versus extracellular K+ concentrations
([K+]intra = 150 mM, [K+]extra =
3-5 mM), an unmet need for studies of K+ physiology and pathology
remains a relative dearth of methods to reliably measure dynamic changes in
intracellular K+ in biological specimens that meet the dual
challenges of low affinity and high selectivity for K+, particularly
over Na+, as currently available fluorescent K+ sensors are
largely optimized with high-affinity receptors that are more amenable for
extracellular K+ detection. We report the design, synthesis, and
biological evaluation of Ratiometric Potassium Sensor 1 (RPS-1), a dual-fluorophore
sensor that enables ratiometric fluorescence imaging of intracellular potassium
in living systems. RPS-1 links a potassium-responsive fluorescent sensor
fragment (PS525) with a low-affinity, high-selectivity crown ether receptor
for K+ to a potassium-insensitive reference fluorophore (Coumarin
343) as an internal calibration standard through ester bonds. Upon intracellular
delivery, esterase-directed cleavage splits these two dyes into separate
fragments to enable ratiometric detection of K+. RPS-1
responds to K+ in aqueous buffer with high selectivity over
competing metal ions and is sensitive to potassium ions at steady-state intracellular
levels and can respond to decreases or increases from that basal set point.
Moreover, RPS-1 was applied for comparative screening of K+
pools across a panel of different cancer cell lines, revealing elevations in basal
intracellular K+ in metastatic breast cancer cell lines vs normal
breast cells. This work provides a unique chemical tool for the study of
intracellular potassium dynamics and a starting point for the design of other
ratiometric fluorescent sensors based on two-fluorophore approaches that do not
rely on FRET or related energy transfer designs.
Supplementary materials
Title
CJC Ratio potassium Final SI
Description
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Title
Chemrxiv Ratio potassium Final
Description
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Title
CJC Ratio potassium Final SI
Description
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