posted on 2021-07-16, 10:14authored byAhlame Saidi, Mylène Wartenberg, Jean-Baptiste Madinier, Guy Ilango, Seda Seren, Brice Korkmaz, Fabien Lecaille, Vincent Aucagne, Gilles Lalmanach
A near-infrared
fluorescent (NIRF) substrate-based probe (SBP)
was conceived to monitor secreted human proteinase 3 (hPR3) activity.
This probe, called pro3-SBP, is shaped by a fused peptide hairpin
loop structure, which associates a hPR3 recognition domain (Val-Ala-Asp-Nva-Ala-Asp-Tyr-Gln,
where Nva is norvaline) and an electrostatic zipper (consisting of
complementary polyanionic (d-Glu)5 and polycationic
(d-Arg)5 sequences) in close vicinity of the N-
and C-terminal FRET couple (fluorescent donor, sulfoCy5.5; dark quencher,
QSY21). Besides its subsequent stability, no intermolecular fluorescence
quenching was detected following its complete hydrolysis by hPR3,
advocating that pro3-SBP could further afford unbiased imaging. Pro3-SBP
was specifically hydrolyzed by hPR3 (kcat/Km= 440 000 ± 5500 M–1·s–1) and displayed a sensitive
detection threshold for hPR3 (subnanomolar concentration range), while
neutrophil elastase showed a weaker potency. Conversely, pro3-SBP
was not cleaved by cathepsin G. Pro3-SBP was successfully hydrolyzed
by conditioned media of activated human neutrophils but not by quiescent
neutrophils. Moreover, unlike unstimulated neutrophils, a strong NIRF
signal was specifically detected by confocal microscopy following
neutrophil ionomycin-induced degranulation. Fluorescence release was
abolished in the presence of a selective hPR3 inhibitor, indicating
that pro3-SBP is selectively cleaved by extracellular hPR3. Taken
together, the present data support that pro3-SBP could be a convenient
tool, allowing straightforward monitoring of human neutrophil activation.