Open Access
1 March 2007 Application of fluorescence resonance energy transfer resolved by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy for the detection of enterovirus 71 infection in cells
Vladimir Gukassyan, Yueh-Ying Hsu, Szu-Hao Kung, Fu-Jen Kao
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Timely and effective virus infection detection is critical for the clinical management and prevention of the disease spread in communities during an outbreak. A range of methods have been developed for this purpose, of which classical serological and viral nucleic acids detection are the most popular. We describe an alternative, imaging-based approach that utilizes fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) resolved by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM) and demonstrate it on the example of enterovirus 71 (EV71) infection detection. A plasmid construct is developed with the sequence for GFP2 and DsRed2 fluorescent proteins, linked by a 12-amino-acid-long cleavage recognition site for the 2A protease (2Apro), encoded by the EV71 genome and specific for the members of Picornaviridae family. In the construct expressed in HeLa cells, the linker binds the fluorophores within the Förster distance and creates a condition for FRET to occur, thus resulting in shortening of the GFP2 fluorescence lifetime. On cells infection with EV71, viral 2Apro released to the cytoplasm cleaves the recognition site, causing disruption of FRET through separation of the fluorophores. Thus, increased GFP2 lifetime to the native values, manifested by the time-correlated single-photon counting, serves as an efficient and specific indicator of the EV71 virus infection.

1.

Introduction

First isolated and characterized1 from cases of neurological disease occurring in California from 1969 to 1973, the enterovirus 71 (EV71) causes seasonal epidemics of hand-foot-and-mouth disease (HFMD) with fatal neurological complications in young children. The virus has been associated with outbreaks in Australia, Brazil, Bulgaria, Hungary, Japan, Malaysia, and the United States. The largest and most severe EV71 epidemic to date occurred2 in Taiwan in 1998. At that time 129,106 cases of HFMD/herpangina were reported, of which 405 cases had severe neurological complications and/or pulmonary edema, and 78 cases of child mortality were claimed. The recent HFMD outbreak in Singapore in October 2000 affected several thousand children and resulted in four deaths.3

EV71, one of 64 enterovirus serotypes, belonging to the Picornaviridae family,4 is a small nonenveloped icosahedral virus with positive single-stranded RNA genome of about 7400 nucleotides5 translated to a single giant polyprotein. Mature proteins are derived in a series of posttranslational cleavages of the precursor protein whereby the initial stages are accomplished by the 2A protease (2Apro) released by the rapid cotranslational cleavage at its own amino terminus.6, 7, 8, 9 In the cytoplasm of a host cell, the 2Apro performs also a bundle of other activities. Thus, expressed in mammalian cells, 2Apro caused significant reduction of RNA polymerase type II transcription and, to a lesser extent, DNA transcription.10 Although direct participation of the 2Apro in these processes has not yet been proven, this evidence demonstrates that like many other viral proteins, 2Apro is a multifunctional enzyme, which is important for the complete infection cycle to happen.

A range of methods are being used for the EV71 infection diagnosis, such as classical serological (including the “golden standard” neutralization test and complement fixation), and the most effective currently reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), Southern blot, and others, based on the detection of viral nucleic acids.

Approaches based on microscopy techniques have demonstrated high efficiency and advantages in diagnosis speeds as compared to the classical methods.11, 12 Recent advancements in photonics technologies further increased such opportunities. Examples include applications of single-molecule imaging13 and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy14, 15 (FCS) for virus detection. Here we propose another novel approach for the detection of EV71 infection, based on the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) resolved by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM).

FRET is a quantum mechanical process between two fluorophores whereby energy from an excited donor molecule is transferred to the acceptor molecule by means of a near-field dipole-dipole coupling.16 The efficiency of the process varies with the sixth power of the intermolecular separation and is usually described by means of Forster radius (a distance at which coupling efficiency reaches 50%), typically within the range of 2to7nm . The depletion of the excited state population of the donor at FRET reduces both its fluorescence intensity and lifetime,17 which is an average time the molecule stays in an excited state before returning to the ground state. A method to map the lifetimes distribution on microscopic images, recently FLIM has become a well-established technique to investigate energy transfer processes in cells.18, 19 As compared to the fluorescence intensity-based measurements, FLIM does not depend on the concentration of the fluorophores and is less affected by side effects, such as background noise, spectral hole burning, and photobleaching. Among all lifetime imaging techniques, the time-correlated single-photon counting (TCSPC) has demonstrated the highest recording efficiency and time resolution.20, 21 Mature and reliable, TCSPC is based on the repetitive excitation of a fluorophore, recording of the single photons emitted, measurement of the detection times and reconstruction of the wave form from the individual time measurements.22, 23 Despite alternative and possibly faster recording method reported earlier,24, 25 less accuracy is generally achieved when compared with that of the TCSPC.

For the detection of EV71 by means of FLIM/FRET, a genetically modified cell line was created by the transfection of HeLa cells with a plasmid, encoding the FRET pair of donor green fluorescent protein F64L mutant (GFP2) and acceptor DsRed2, linked by a 12-amino-acid-long spacer, whereby the sequence of the link was a cleavage recognition site for the enteroviral 2Apro . Expressed in cells, the fusion protein, referred to as G2AwtR, served as a reporter molecule for the maturation of enteroviral polyprotein. Upon the initial proteolytic processing and release of the 2Apro to the cytoplasm, the protease clove the linker between the fluorophores, thus causing FRET disruption and hence increase of the GFP2 lifetime, detected by the TCSPC technique.

2.

Materials and Methods

2.1.

Plasmid Constructs

A recombinant plasmid pG2AwtR composed of the GFP2 and DsRed2 genes with a linker that encodes the predicted EV71 2Apro cleavage motif (RTAITTL↓RKFGQ, where the arrow indicates the scissile bond) was constructed. For the mutant control the pG2AwtR has been modified with the GR substitution in the P1 position of the cleavage motif. pG2AwtR and pG2AmutR plasmids were separately transfected into HeLa cells and subjected to Zeocin selection, followed by a limiting dilution to obtain stable clones, referred to as HeLa-G2AwtR and HeLa-G2AmutR, respectively.

2.2.

Cells Infection, Fixation, and Preparation

HeLa-G2AwtR and HeLa-G2AmutR cells were subject to infection by EV71 (BrCr strain) or herpes simplex virus (HSV, KOS strain) at a multiplicity of infection for 5to12h , or left mock-infected. Cells were washed with phosphate-buffered saline (PBS), fixed with formaldehyde (3%) for 30min and sealed in a mounting medium (1:1 ratio of glycerol plus PBS) prior to the lifetime measurements. For apoptosis induction cells were treated with 40μM cisplatin at 70% confluence prior to fixation.

2.3.

Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging

Time-domain FLIM was performed with a 60× 1.45 numerical aperture (NA) PlanApochromat oil objective lens (Olympus Corp.) on a modified two-photon laser scanning microscope (FV300 with the IX71 inverted microscope, Olympus Corp.). Samples were excited at 800nm (two photons) by a mode-locked femtosecond Ti:sapphire Mira F-900 laser, pumped by a solid state cw 532-nm Verdi laser (both from Coherent Inc.) and operated at a 76-MHz frequency. The laser beam was fed into the scanning unit with high-precision alignment. The scanning speed of the FV300 was controlled externally by a function generator (AFG310, Tektronix Inc.) so as to be synchronized with the TSCPC-based multichannel scalar to record the FLIM images.

Fluorescence photons were detected in a nondescanned mode by a photon-counting photomultiplier (H7422P-40, Hamamatsu Photonics K.K.). Time-resolved detection was conducted by the SPC-830 PC board (Becker&Hickl GmbH) with the repetition rate of the Ti:sapphire laser serving as the time base. A green bandpass filter of 526±26.5nm (Edmund Optics Inc.) was used in the detection channel for the GFP lifetime measurements along with a shortpass IR cut-off filter. All the images were taken at 256×256pixels resolution with the acquisition times in the range of 50to250s to reach sufficient photon counts for statistically reliable fitting.

2.4.

FLIM Data Analysis

Data analysis via model function fitting along with the instrument response function (IRF) deconvolution and color coding was conducted with the commercially available SPCImage v2.8 software package (Becker&Hickl GmbH). Fluorescence decay in each pixel of the analyzed lifetime images may result from a few fluorophore molecules and vary with their different states and conformations. To describe the composite decays the software utilizes a multiexponential function with offset correction for the ambient light and/or dark noise. On the prior convolution with the IRF, the model function is fitted to the actual data by iterative reconvolution:

Eq. 1

I(t)=Iinstr(t){I0+i=1nai[exp(tτi)]}dt,
where Iinstr is the instrument response, which in our analysis was automatically calculated by software (approximation by a Gaussian function and the width adjustment for the best fit to the rising edge of the decay functions), I0 is the baseline offset, and ai[exp(tτi)] represents the main components of the resulting fluorescence decay. The intensity ai coefficients have relative amplitudes and demonstrate the correlation between components fractions populations. Due to the extremely low duration as compared to the temporal resolution of the photomultiplier used, the scattering parameter was not considered for the purpose of this experiment and was fixed with the meaning of 0.

The reduced goodness-of-fit parameter was calculated by

Eq. 2

χR2={k=1n[I(tk)IC(tk)]2I(tk)}(np),
where I(tk) is the actual experimental data, IC(tk) calculates decay as already described, n is the number of the data (time) points, and p is the number of the model parameters.26 The χR2 was minimized by the Levenberg-Marquardt search algorithm.

The main comparison analysis of G2AwtR lifetime histogram, recorded in the GFP channel, with that of mutant virus specificity and apoptosis controls was conducted by fitting the experimental data to a single-exponential decay model. The autofluorescence from HeLa cells and bleedthrough from dsRed2 were found negligible and were reduced by increasing the threshold parameter at the analysis of lifetime images.

The deviation in measured lifetime was obtained statistically and does not represent the width of IRF.

3.

Results

3.1.

Indicating the EV71 Virus Infection

One of the main indicators of FRET occurring is a shortening of the donor lifetime in the presence of an acceptor. To obtain a reference point for further measurements, the lifetime of the GFP2 was first characterized under sole expression in HeLa cells. Recorded from the mock cells, GFP2 lifetime was equal to 2.3±0.04ns , whereas at virus infection the lifetime was shifted slightly to the shorter range and resulted in an averaged histogram with the peak at 2.25±0.02ns [Figs. 1 and 2a ].

Fig. 1

024016_1_037702jbod1.jpg024016_1_037702jbo1.jpg

Fig. 2

Fluorescence intensity decays recorded from (a) GFP2, solely expressed in HeLa cells; (b) mock HeLa-G2AwtR; and (c) HeLa-G2AwtR, infected with EV71.

024016_1_037702jbo2.jpg

Results obtained at the measurements from HeLa-G2AwtR are presented in Figs. 1, 2b, 2c, 3b, 3c . Lifetime recording in the GFP-channel, taken from the mock-infected cells, resulted in a histogram with a plateau-shaped top, centered at 2±0.07ns . For the cells infected with the EV71 virus, we observed a shift to longer lifetimes, reaching the peak of 2.26±0.05ns . As demonstrated on the comparison plot, on infection the histogram obtained from the G2AwtR lifetime measurements follows the pattern of that recorded from the GFP2 expressed solely, indicative of the fluorophores separation and thus FRET signal disruption as a result of the linker cleavage by the viral 2Apro .

Fig. 3

Lifetime color coded and fluorescence intensity images obtained from (a) mock HeLa-G2AwtR and (b) EV71-infected HeLa-G2AwtR and lifetime color coded images of (c) cisplatin-treated HeLa-G2wtR, (d) EV71-infected HeLa-G2AmutR, and (e) HSV-infected HeLa-G2AwtR. (Color online only.)

024016_1_037702jbo3.jpg

3.2.

Effect of Cytopathic Events on the Reporter Molecule Integrity

Besides the changes in the GFP2 lifetime measured from HeLa-G2AwtR, virus activity also caused a characteristic cytopathic effect (CPE), altering the morphology of cells as well, as observed in our experiments [Fig. 3b]. Earlier it was reported that one of the CPE effects, caused by EV71 is the launch of a programmed cell death, or apoptosis, whereas the 2Apro protease activity was demonstrated as possible primary initiator of the cascade of reactions, leading to the cell self-termination machinery initiation.27, 28 The apoptotic pathway involves a family of aspartate-specific cysteinyl proteases (cysteine aspartases or caspases), activated by proteolytic cleavage. This activation leads to the processing of various cytoplasmic and nuclear targets by a subclass of downstream effectors termed “executioners.”29, 30 To investigate involvement of apoptotic proteolytic machinery to the disruption of G2AwtR protein, HeLa cells were treated with cis-diamminedichloroplatinum(II) (cisplatin)—a known biochemical inducer of apoptosis. The results, presented in Figs. 3c and 4 , indicate no FRET disruption on apoptosis induction. On the contrary, the GFP lifetime in cisplatin-treated samples tends to shift to shorter values (0.2ns) .

Fig. 4

G2AwtR lifetime histogram (⊟) measured on the initiation of apoptosis in cells by cisplatin. Lifetimes of G2AwtR in mock (--) and EV71-infected cells (—) are given for reference.

024016_1_037702jbo4.jpg

3.3.

Specificity of the Method to EV71 Detection

Specificity of the FRET disruption and direct dependence of the linker cleavage on 2Apro release is demonstrated with two additional series of control measurements.

In one case, the linker between the fluorophores was substituted with a mutant variant G2AmutR. The mutation, carried out as described in Sec. 2 affected the cleavage site in a way to prevent its recognition by the 2Apro . Although the change of HeLa-G2AmutR morphology at infection was similar to that of HeLa-G2AwtR, no lifetime decrease was recorded, indicating no FRET disruption [Figs. 3d and 5 ]. As in the case with the cisplatin-induced apoptosis, analysis of fluorescent decays from these samples revealed a decrease of lifetime as compared to the mock cells by 0.1ns .

Fig. 5

024016_1_037702jbod2.jpg024016_1_037702jbo5.jpg

To check the authenticity of the G2AwtR to the detection of polioviruses on the example of EV71, we tested an alternative virus infection effect on our construct. For this purpose we infected our HeLa-G2AwtR cells with the HSV. A member of a Herpesviridae family, HSV differs from EV71 in the proteins encoded and main infection pathways. The GFP2 in the reporter G2AwtR exhibited reduction of lifetime at HSV infection, similar to that observed for the lifetime, recorded from apoptotic HeLa-G2AwtR and EV71-infected HeLa-G2AwtR, showing integrity of the reporter in cells [Figs. 3e and 6 ].

Fig. 6

024016_1_037702jbod3.jpg024016_1_037702jbo6.jpg

3.4.

Double-Exponential Analysis

Double-exponential analysis was applied to reveal the distribution of interacting and noninteracting populations in the samples and map the actual separation of the lifetimes. We found that the fraction of noninteracting population is negligible, showing that the majority of the expressed reporter molecules have been recognized by the 2Apro and cleft (data not shown). Lifetime color mapping also revealed that not all the cells underwent the FRET disruption at the same extent, which might be a result of nonsimultaneous infection.

4.

Discussion

4.1.

G2AwtR Lifetime Behavior

Expressed in cells, the G2AwtR construct spread evenly over the cells both in cytoplasm and in nucleus, whereas in nucleus the lifetime appeared to be slightly longer than in cytoplasm (Fig. 7 ), which we assume might result from a pH difference. Besides the intrinsic characteristics, the fluorescence decay of fluorophores depends in a measurable way on the environment, such as viscosity, refractive level, interactions with other molecules, and pH.31 Ambient pH has been shown to influence spectral characteristics of wild-type GFP and a number of its mutants, suggesting pH sensitivity for the entire class of these proteins.32, 33, 34 Some authors35, 36, 37 have previously shown that nuclear pH was above that of the cytosol, which is explained by the permeability barrier to H+ ions by nuclear membrane. This might have been the main cause of the wider standard deviation for the lifetime measured from mock-infected cells (see Table 1 ) and thus broader, plateau-shaped histograms.

Fig. 7

Lifetime histograms and color-coded images of the G2AwtR construct expressed in cytoplasm and nucleus: (a) the color-coded image of the specimen shows a clear contrast between the nucleus (blue) and cytoplasm (orange, green); (b) selection area for the G2AwtR lifetime histogram recording from the cytoplasm (—); and (c) selection area for the G2AwtR lifetime histogram recording from nucleus (--). (Color online only.)

024016_1_037702jbo7.jpg

Table 1

Averaged lifetime histograms peaks and standard deviation values.

Sample/ConditionMaximum Averaged (ns)Standard Deviation (ns)
HeLa-GFP2 / EV71-infected2.25 ±0.02
HeLa-GFP2 / mock-infected2.3 ±0.04
HeLa-G2AwtR / EV71-infected2.26 ±0.05
HeLa-G2AwtR / mock-infected2.01 ±0.07
HeLa-G2AwtR / cisplatin-treated1.87 ±0.07
HeLa-G2AmutR / EV71-infected1.88 ±0.03
HeLa-G2AwtR / HSV-infected1.80 ±0.04

Among other events at apoptosis, which has been shown to be initiated at EV71 infection, different research groups have reported perturbation of the nuclear envelope and clustering of nuclear pores, which leads to the destruction of the permeability barrier.38, 39, 40 This is in good compliance with our results, obtained from the infected cells—we found that on EV71 infection and change of the cell morphology, characteristic for apoptosis, the difference in lifetime between cytoplasm and nucleus is reduced or completely equalized. The concept is supported with the less deviation of the data in infected cells and sharper peak in averaged histograms obtained.

Contributions to this suggestion are the fact that HSV induces apoptosis in cells and a previous report stating that intracellular acidification is one of the apoptosis features, whereas the cytoplasmic pH level, normally exhibiting 7.4, decreases41 to the level of 6.6 to 6.7.46 Taking these data into consideration, we suggest recognizing intracellular acidification as a main reason for the decrease in lifetime recorded in the green channel from mutant FRET complex infected with EV71 and wild-type FRET complex in cells infected by HSV. We admit, however, that this issue was out of the scope of the given research and we did not conduct the 24-h infection by HSV (reported time to produce apoptotic morphological changes) to check this suggestion.

4.2.

Method Advantages and Application Scope

Several protein constructs that put FRET-interacting fluorophores on either side of a protease cleavage recognition site were reported earlier for different applications of FLIM/FRET microscopy, including, but not limited to, the study of proteases activity,42, 43 such as caspases activities during apoptosis,44, 45 and FRET efficiency measurements.46 Having developed a construct with the cleavage recognition site for EV71-specific 2Apro and applying it with FLIM/FRET microscopy, we demonstrated an alternative imaging-based approach with high sensitivity and efficiency for the virus infection detection.

The series of experiments conducted demonstrated that the G2AwtR construct reports specifically the appearance of the 2Apro in the cytoplasm and is not affected by the internal protein machinery even during the critical apoptotic reactions and a range of other CPEs caused by virus infection. Based on the sensitivity to a viral protein, the approach proposed does not depend on the detection of antigens and/or antibodies and is advantageous as compared to the immunofluorescent methods of serological detection, not applicable with untypable viruses and antigenic drifts. As compared to the direct electron microscopy methods, the approach described provides higher efficiency and speed of detection; no special operations are required for the sample preparation. The FLIM/FRET microscopy is independent of the fluorophore concentration, so that even small changes in signal can be detected and thus just a small number of viruses is sufficient for the infection detection.

The proposed method is not applicable to all viral infection detection, provided by serological and viral nucleic acid detection methods, and does not enable us to identify different serotypes of the same virus, which may be important to recognize serotype-specific clinical illness. However, the protease-specific lifetime-based detection method still applies to a range of viruses, encoding a specific protease, whereas definition of the serotypes does not change the clinical management of patients.

Thus, the development of a cell line with the reporter construct described, its infection with the isolated viruses, and further observation with FLIM/FRET microscopy can be applied as a fast, sensitive, and efficient method for the detection of certain viral infection.

Acknowledgments

This work was financially supported by the Ministry of Education, Taiwan (Aim for the Top University Plan, Grant No. 95A-CT8G01), and National Science Council, Taiwan (under Grants NSC95-2112-M010-001 and NSC95-3112-B-010-015).

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©(2007) Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE)
Vladimir Gukassyan, Yueh-Ying Hsu, Szu-Hao Kung, and Fu-Jen Kao "Application of fluorescence resonance energy transfer resolved by fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy for the detection of enterovirus 71 infection in cells," Journal of Biomedical Optics 12(2), 024016 (1 March 2007). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.2718582
Published: 1 March 2007
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Cited by 30 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Fluorescence resonance energy transfer

Fluorescence lifetime imaging

Cell death

Microscopy

Luminescence

Proteins

Data modeling

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