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Rapid Diffusion of Green Fluorescent Protein in the Mitochondrial Matrix

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TLDR
The rapid and unrestricted diffusion of solutes in the mitochondrial matrix suggests that metabolite channeling may not be required to overcome diffusive barriers, and it is proposed that the clustering of matrix enzymes in membrane-associated complexes might serve to establish a relatively uncrowded aqueous space in which solutes can freely diffuse.
Abstract
It is thought that the high protein density in the mitochondrial matrix results in severely restricted solute diffusion and metabolite channeling from one enzyme to another without free aqueous-phase diffusion. To test this hypothesis, we measured the diffusion of green fluorescent protein (GFP) expressed in the mitochondrial matrix of fibroblast, liver, skeletal muscle, and epithelial cell lines. Spot photobleaching of GFP with a 100x objective (0.8-micron spot diam) gave half-times for fluorescence recovery of 15-19 ms with >90% of the GFP mobile. As predicted for aqueous-phase diffusion in a confined compartment, fluorescence recovery was slowed or abolished by increased laser spot size or bleach time, and by paraformaldehyde fixation. Quantitative analysis of bleach data using a mathematical model of matrix diffusion gave GFP diffusion coefficients of 2-3 x 10(-7) cm2/s, only three to fourfold less than that for GFP diffusion in water. In contrast, little recovery was found for bleaching of GFP in fusion with subunits of the fatty acid beta-oxidation multienzyme complex that are normally present in the matrix. Measurement of the rotation of unconjugated GFP by time-resolved anisotropy gave a rotational correlation time of 23.3 +/- 1 ns, similar to that of 20 ns for GFP rotation in water. A rapid rotational correlation time of 325 ps was also found for a small fluorescent probe (BCECF, approximately 0.5 kD) in the matrix of isolated liver mitochondria. The rapid and unrestricted diffusion of solutes in the mitochondrial matrix suggests that metabolite channeling may not be required to overcome diffusive barriers. We propose that the clustering of matrix enzymes in membrane-associated complexes might serve to establish a relatively uncrowded aqueous space in which solutes can freely diffuse.

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Observing proteins in their natural habitat: the living cell.

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Measuring protein mobility by photobleaching GFP chimeras in living cells.

TL;DR: This unit describes fluorescence recovery afterphotobleaching (FRAP) and fluorescence loss in photobleached (FLIP) using commercially available confocal scanning laser microscopy (CSLM) to provide fundamentally new insights into the kinetic properties of proteins in cells.
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Trafficking of endothelial nitric-oxide synthase in living cells. Quantitative evidence supporting the role of palmitoylation as a kinetic trapping mechanism limiting membrane diffusion

TL;DR: Fluorescence recovery after photobleaching revealed eNOS-GFP in the perinuclear region moving 3 times faster than the plasmalemmal pool, suggesting that protein-lipid or protein-protein interactions are different in these two cellular domains.
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Monte Carlo Analysis of Obstructed Diffusion in Three Dimensions: Application to Molecular Diffusion in Organelles

TL;DR: In this article, Monte Carlo simulations of particle diffusion in three dimensions were carried out to evaluate the influence of organelle structure on diffusive transport and to relate experimental photobleaching data to intrinsic diffusion coefficients.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Mobility measurement by analysis of fluorescence photobleaching recovery kinetics.

TL;DR: The theoretical basis and some practical guidelines for simple, rigorous analysis of FPR experiments are presented and some model experiments on aqueous solutions of rhodamine 6G are described.
Journal ArticleDOI

Crystal structure of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein.

TL;DR: The green fluorescent protein (GFP) from the Pacific Northwest jellyfish Aequorea victoria has generated intense interest as a marker for gene expression and localization of gene products.
Journal ArticleDOI

The molecular structure of green fluorescent protein

TL;DR: The crystal structure of recombinant wild-type green fluorescent protein (GFP) has been solved to a resolution of 1.9 Å by multiwavelength anomalous dispersion phasing methods and the identification of the dimer contacts may allow mutagenic control of the state of assembly of the protein.
Journal ArticleDOI

Facilitated target location in biological systems

TL;DR: This minireview has attempted to provide some overall perspective on the question of how various forms of diffusion in reduced dimensions, or diffusion within a nonspecifically bound state, can speed biological interactions beyond the limits normally set by three-dimensional diffusion processes.
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