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Red Light-Activated Reversible Inhibition of Protein Functions by Assembled Trap

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posted on 2025-04-30, 13:41 authored by Peng Zhou, Yongkang Jia, Tianyu Zhang, Abasi Abudukeremu, Xuan He, Xiaozhong Zhang, Chao Liu, Wei Li, Zengpeng Li, Ling Sun, Shouhong Guang, Zhongcheng Zhou, Zhiheng Yuan, Xiaohua Lu, Yang Yu
Red light, characterized by superior tissue penetration and minimal phototoxicity, represents an ideal wavelength for optogenetic applications. However, the existing tools for reversible protein inhibition by red light remain limited. Here, we introduce R-LARIAT (red light-activated reversible inhibition by assembled trap), a novel optogenetic system enabling precise spatiotemporal control of protein function via 660 nm red-light-induced protein clustering. Our system harnesses the rapid and reversible binding of engineered light-dependent binders (LDBs) to the bacterial phytochrome DrBphP, which utilizes the endogenous mammalian biliverdin chromophore for red light absorption. By fusing LDBs with single-domain antibodies targeting epitope-tagged proteins (e.g., GFP), R-LARIAT enables the rapid sequestration of diverse proteins into light-responsive clusters. This approach demonstrates high light sensitivity, clustering efficiency, and sustained stability. As a proof of concept, R-LARIAT-mediated sequestration of tubulin inhibits cell cycle progression in HeLa cells. This system expands the optogenetic toolbox for studying dynamic biological processes with high spatial and temporal resolution and holds the potential for applications in living tissues.

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