Conspectus Membranes are multifunctional supramolecular assemblies that encapsulate our cells and the organelles within them. Glycerophospholipids are the most abundant component of membranes. They make up the majority of the lipid bilayer and play both structural and functional roles. Each organelle has a different phospholipid composition critical for its function that results from dynamic interplay and regulation of numerous lipid-metabolizing enzymes and lipid transporters. Because lipid structures and localizations are not directly genetically encoded, chemistry has much to offer to the world of lipid biology in the form of precision tools for visualizing lipid localization and abundance, manipulating lipid composition, and in general decoding the functions of lipids in cells. In this Account, we provide an overview of our recent efforts in this space focused on two overarching and complementary goals: imaging and editing the phospholipidome. On the imaging front, we have harnessed the power of bioorthogonal chemistry to develop fluorescent reporters of specific lipid pathways. Substantial efforts have centered on phospholipase D (PLD) signaling, which generates the humble lipid phosphatidic acid (PA) that acts variably as a biosynthetic intermediate and signaling agent. Though PLD is a hydrolase that generates PA from abundant phosphatidylcholine (PC) lipids, we have exploited its transphosphatidylation activity with exogenous clickable alcohols followed by bioorthogonal tagging to generate fluorescent lipid reporters of PLD signaling in a set of methods termed IMPACT. IMPACT and its variants have facilitated many biological discoveries. Using the rapid and fluorogenic tetrazine ligation, it has revealed the spatiotemporal dynamics of disease-relevant G protein-coupled receptor signaling and interorganelle lipid transport. IMPACT using diazirine photo-cross-linkers has enabled identification of lipid–protein interactions relevant to alcohol-related diseases. Varying the alcohol reporter can allow for organelle-selective labeling, and varying the bioorthogonal detection reagent can afford super-resolution lipid imaging via expansion microscopy. Combination of IMPACT with genome-wide CRISPR screening has revealed genes that regulate physiological PLD signaling. PLD enzymes themselves can also act as tools for precision editing of the phospholipid content of membranes. An optogenetic PLD for conditional blue-light-stimulated synthesis of PA on defined organelle compartments led to the discovery of the role of organelle-specific pools of PA in regulating oncogenic Hippo signaling. Directed enzyme evolution of PLD, enabled by IMPACT, has yielded highly active superPLDs with broad substrate tolerance and an ability to edit membrane phospholipid content and synthesize designer phospholipids in vitro. Finally, azobenzene-containing PA analogues represent an alternative, all-chemical strategy for light-mediated control of PA signaling. Collectively, the strategies described here summarize our progress to date in tac...
The specialized functions of eukaryotic organelles have motivated chemical approaches for their selective tagging and visualization. Here, we develop chemoenzymatic tools using metabolic labeling of abundant membrane lipids for selective visualization of organelle compartments. Synthetic choline analogues with three N-methyl substituents replaced with 2-azidoethyl and additional alkyl groups enabled the generation of corresponding derivatives of phosphatidylcholine (PC), a ubiquitous and abundant membrane phospholipid. Subsequent bioorthogonal tagging via the strain-promoted azide−alkyne cycloaddition (SPAAC) with a single cyclooctyne-fluorophore reagent enabled differential labeling of the endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi complex, mitochondria, and lysosomes depending upon the substitution pattern at the choline ammonium center. Key to the success of this strategy was the harnessing of both the organic cation transporter OCT1 to enable cytosolic delivery of these cationic metabolic probes and endogenous phospholipase D enzymes for rapid, one-step metabolic conversion of the choline analogues to the desired lipid products. Detailed analysis of the trafficking kinetics of both the SPAAC-tagged fluorescent PC analogues and their non-fluorescent, azide-containing precursors revealed that the latter exhibit time-dependent differences in organelle selectivity, suggesting their use as probes for visualizing intracellular lipid transport pathways. By contrast, the stable localizations of the fluorescent PC analogues will allow applications not only for organelle-selective imaging but also for local modulation of physiological events with organelle-level precision by tethering of bioactive small molecules, via click chemistry, within defined subcellular membrane environments.
The specialized functions of eukaryotic organelles have motivated chemical approaches for their selective tagging and visualization. Here we develop non-genetically encoded tools using metabolic labeling of abundant membrane lipids for selective visualization of organelle compartments. Synthetic choline analogs with three N-methyl substituents replaced with 2-azidoethyl and additional alkyl groups enabled generation of corresponding analogs of phosphatidylcholine, a ubiquitous and abundant membrane phospholipid. Subsequent click chemistry tagging with a single cyclooctyne-fluorophore reagent enabled differential labeling of the endoplasmic reticulum, the Golgi complex, mitochondria, and lysosomes depending upon the substitution pattern at the choline ammonium center. Key to the success of this strategy were the harnessing of both the organic cation transporter OCT1 to enable cytosolic delivery of these cationic metabolic probes and endogenous phospholipase D enzymes for rapid, one-step metabolic conversion of the choline analogs to the desired lipid products. The remarkably stable localizations of these azidolipids, even after fluorophore conjugation, suggests their application not only for organelle-selective imaging but also for local modulation of physiological events with organelle-level precision by tethering of bioactive small molecules, via click chemistry, within defined subcellular membrane environments.
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