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Probing metalloenzyme dynamics in living systems: Contemporary advances in fluorescence imaging tools and applications

Metalloenzymes are essential to cellular function, and their overexpression or enhanced activation are potential therapeutic targets. However, the study of metalloenzymes in vitro presents various challenges, leading many to develop tools to study them in their native cellular environment. Small-mol...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Current opinion in chemical biology 2024-08, Vol.81, p.102475, Article 102475
Main Authors: Price, Sky, Que, Emily L.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:Metalloenzymes are essential to cellular function, and their overexpression or enhanced activation are potential therapeutic targets. However, the study of metalloenzymes in vitro presents various challenges, leading many to develop tools to study them in their native cellular environment. Small-molecule fluorescence probes are commonly used to monitor metalloenzyme function, activity, and distribution in situ. These include probes that are activity-based (fluorescence is mediated by enzyme activity) or binding-based (fluorescence is mediated by interactions with the enzyme upon binding its metal cofactor). We discuss recent innovations that overcome key design challenges, such as the rapid diffusion of activity-based probes, the difficulty of probing redox-active enzymes, the selectivity of binding-based probes, and the poor penetration depth of fluorescence, and describe novel applications of these tools. [Display omitted]
ISSN:1367-5931
1879-0402
1879-0402
DOI:10.1016/j.cbpa.2024.102475