TY - JOUR
T1 - Novel acid-activated fluorophores reveal a dynamic wave of protons in the intestine of caenorhabditis elegans
AU - Bender, Aaron
AU - Woydziak, Zachary R.
AU - Fu, Liqiang
AU - Branden, Michael
AU - Zhou, Zhenguo
AU - Ackley, Brian D.
AU - Peterson, Blake R.
PY - 2013/3/15
Y1 - 2013/3/15
N2 - Unlike the digestive systems of vertebrate animals, the lumen of the alimentary canal of Caenorhabditis elegans is unsegmented and weakly acidic (pH ∼4.4), with ultradian fluctuations to pH > 6 every 45-50 s. To probe the dynamics of this acidity, we synthesized novel acid-activated fluorophores termed Kansas Reds. These dicationic derivatives of rhodamine B become concentrated in the lumen of the intestine of living C. elegans and exhibit tunable pKa values (2.3-5.4), controlled by the extent of fluorination of an alkylamine substituent, that allow imaging of a range of acidic fluids in vivo. Fluorescence video microscopy of animals freely feeding on these fluorophores revealed that acidity in the C. elegans intestine is discontinuous; the posterior intestine contains a large acidic segment flanked by a smaller region of higher pH at the posterior-most end. Remarkably, during the defecation motor program, this hot spot of acidity rapidly moves from the posterior intestine to the anterior-most intestine where it becomes localized for up to 7 s every 45-50 s. Studies of pH-insensitive and base-activated fluorophores as well as mutant and transgenic animals revealed that this dynamic wave of acidity requires the proton exchanger PBO-4, does not involve substantial movement of fluid, and likely involves the sequential activation of proton transporters on the apical surface of intestinal cells. Lacking a specific organ that sequesters low pH, C. elegans compartmentalizes acidity by producing of a dynamic hot spot of protons that rhythmically migrates from the posterior to anterior intestine.
AB - Unlike the digestive systems of vertebrate animals, the lumen of the alimentary canal of Caenorhabditis elegans is unsegmented and weakly acidic (pH ∼4.4), with ultradian fluctuations to pH > 6 every 45-50 s. To probe the dynamics of this acidity, we synthesized novel acid-activated fluorophores termed Kansas Reds. These dicationic derivatives of rhodamine B become concentrated in the lumen of the intestine of living C. elegans and exhibit tunable pKa values (2.3-5.4), controlled by the extent of fluorination of an alkylamine substituent, that allow imaging of a range of acidic fluids in vivo. Fluorescence video microscopy of animals freely feeding on these fluorophores revealed that acidity in the C. elegans intestine is discontinuous; the posterior intestine contains a large acidic segment flanked by a smaller region of higher pH at the posterior-most end. Remarkably, during the defecation motor program, this hot spot of acidity rapidly moves from the posterior intestine to the anterior-most intestine where it becomes localized for up to 7 s every 45-50 s. Studies of pH-insensitive and base-activated fluorophores as well as mutant and transgenic animals revealed that this dynamic wave of acidity requires the proton exchanger PBO-4, does not involve substantial movement of fluid, and likely involves the sequential activation of proton transporters on the apical surface of intestinal cells. Lacking a specific organ that sequesters low pH, C. elegans compartmentalizes acidity by producing of a dynamic hot spot of protons that rhythmically migrates from the posterior to anterior intestine.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84875168987&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/cb300396j
DO - 10.1021/cb300396j
M3 - Article
C2 - 23256594
AN - SCOPUS:84875168987
SN - 1554-8929
VL - 8
SP - 636
EP - 642
JO - ACS Chemical Biology
JF - ACS Chemical Biology
IS - 3
ER -