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Rapid Diffusion of Green Fluorescent Protein in the Mitochondrial Matrix

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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Journal ArticleDOI

Studying protein dynamics in living cells.

TL;DR: Live cell imaging, in combination with photobleaching, energy transfer or fluorescence correlation spectroscopy are providing unprecedented insights into the movement of proteins and their interactions with cellular components.
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Development and use of fluorescent protein markers in living cells.

TL;DR: The development of highly visible and minimally perturbing fluorescent proteins that, together with updated fluorescent imaging techniques, are providing unprecedented insights into the movement of proteins and their interactions with cellular components in living cells are traced.
Journal ArticleDOI

Macromolecular crowding: an important but neglected aspect of the intracellular environment.

TL;DR: It is proposed that the addition of crowding agents should become as routine as controlling pH and ionic strength if the authors are to meet the objective of studying biological molecules under more physiologically relevant conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Size-dependent DNA Mobility in Cytoplasm and Nucleus

TL;DR: The results suggest that the highly restricted diffusion of DNA fragments in nucleoplasm results from extensive binding to immobile obstacles and that the decreased lateral mobility of DNAs >250 bp in cytoplasm is because of molecular crowding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Green fluorescent protein as a noninvasive intracellular pH indicator.

TL;DR: The results establish the application of GFP as a targetable, noninvasive indicator of intracellular pH and suggest that GFP pH sensitivity involves simple protonation events at a pH of >5, but both protonations and conformational changes at lower pH.
References
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Lateral diffusion in an archipelago. Dependence on tracer size

TL;DR: In a pure fluid-phase lipid, the dependence of the lateral diffusion coefficient on the size of the diffusing particle may be obtained from the Saffman-Delbrück equation or the free-volume model, but when diffusion is obstructed by immobile proteins or domains of gel-phase lipids, the obstacles yield an additional contribution to the size dependence.
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Cytoplasmic viscosity near the cell plasma membrane: Measurement by evanescent field frequency-domain microfluorimetry

TL;DR: The results establish the methodology for time-resolved microfluorimetric measurement of polarization in the evanescent field and demonstrate that the cell plasma membrane has little effect on the fluid-phase viscosity of adjacent cytoplasm.
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Molecular cloning of the cDNAs for the subunits of rat mitochondrial fatty acid beta-oxidation multienzyme complex. Structural and functional relationships to other mitochondrial and peroxisomal beta-oxidation enzymes.

TL;DR: By phylogenetic analysis of the deduced amino acid sequences of the alpha- and beta-subunits with those of other beta-oxidation enzymes, it was suggested that thealpha-subunit is a descendant of short chain enoyl- CoA hydratase and short chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase while the beta- subunit first diverged from a common ancestor gene of the thiolase family.
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Self-diffusion and probe diffusion in dilute and semidilute aqueous solutions of dextran

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated tracer diffusion processes in polymeric solutions of dextran in both the dilute and semidilute regimes by the fluorescence photobleaching recovery technique.
Journal ArticleDOI

Long tail kinetics in biophysics

TL;DR: The effects of long tail kinetics are investigated for two standard biophysical measurements, fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP), and dynamic light scattering (DLS).
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