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Dive into the research topics where Alexander S. Mishin is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander S. Mishin.


Nature Chemical Biology | 2009

Green fluorescent proteins are light-induced electron donors

Alexey M. Bogdanov; Alexander S. Mishin; Ilia V. Yampolsky; Vsevolod V. Belousov; Dmitriy M. Chudakov; Fedor V. Subach; Vladislav V. Verkhusha; Sergey Lukyanov; Konstantin A. Lukyanov

Proteins of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) family are well known due to their unique biochemistry and extensive use as in vivo markers. Here, we discovered a new feature of GFPs of diverse origins to act as the light-induced electron donors in photochemical reactions with various electron acceptors, including biologically relevant ones. Moreover, this process accompanying with green-to-red GFP photoconversion can be observed in living cells without additional treatment.


Nature | 2016

Local fitness landscape of the green fluorescent protein.

Karen S. Sarkisyan; Dmitry A. Bolotin; Margarita V. Meer; Dinara R. Usmanova; Alexander S. Mishin; George V. Sharonov; Dmitry N. Ivankov; Nina G. Bozhanova; Mikhail S. Baranov; Onuralp Soylemez; Natalya S. Bogatyreva; Peter K. Vlasov; Evgeny S. Egorov; Maria D. Logacheva; Alexey S. Kondrashov; Dmitry M. Chudakov; Ekaterina V. Putintseva; Ilgar Z. Mamedov; Dan S. Tawfik; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Fyodor A. Kondrashov

Fitness landscapes depict how genotypes manifest at the phenotypic level and form the basis of our understanding of many areas of biology, yet their properties remain elusive. Previous studies have analysed specific genes, often using their function as a proxy for fitness, experimentally assessing the effect on function of single mutations and their combinations in a specific sequence or in different sequences. However, systematic high-throughput studies of the local fitness landscape of an entire protein have not yet been reported. Here we visualize an extensive region of the local fitness landscape of the green fluorescent protein from Aequorea victoria (avGFP) by measuring the native function (fluorescence) of tens of thousands of derivative genotypes of avGFP. We show that the fitness landscape of avGFP is narrow, with 3/4 of the derivatives with a single mutation showing reduced fluorescence and half of the derivatives with four mutations being completely non-fluorescent. The narrowness is enhanced by epistasis, which was detected in up to 30% of genotypes with multiple mutations and mostly occurred through the cumulative effect of slightly deleterious mutations causing a threshold-like decrease in protein stability and a concomitant loss of fluorescence. A model of orthologous sequence divergence spanning hundreds of millions of years predicted the extent of epistasis in our data, indicating congruence between the fitness landscape properties at the local and global scales. The characterization of the local fitness landscape of avGFP has important implications for several fields including molecular evolution, population genetics and protein design.


Biochemistry | 2008

The first mutant of the Aequorea victoria green fluorescent protein that forms a red chromophore

Alexander S. Mishin; Fedor V. Subach; Ilia V. Yampolsky; William King; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Vladislav V. Verkhusha

Green fluorescent protein (GFP) from a jellyfish, Aequorea victoria, and its mutants are widely used in biomedical studies as fluorescent markers. In spite of the enormous efforts of academia and industry toward generating its red fluorescent mutants, no GFP variants with emission maximum at more than 529 nm have been developed during the 15 years since its cloning. Here, we used a new strategy of molecular evolution aimed at generating a red-emitting mutant of GFP. As a result, we have succeeded in producing the first GFP mutant that substantially matures to the red-emitting state with excitation and emission maxima at 555 and 585 nm, respectively. A novel, nonoxidative mechanism for formation of the red chromophore in this mutant that includes a dehydration of the Ser65 side chain has been proposed. Model experiments showed that the novel dual-color GFP mutant with green and red emission is suitable for multicolor flow cytometry as an additional color since it is clearly separable from both green and red fluorescent tags.


Current Opinion in Chemical Biology | 2015

Fluorescence imaging using synthetic GFP chromophores

Christopher L Walker; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Ilia V. Yampolsky; Alexander S. Mishin; Andreas S. Bommarius; Anna Duraj-Thatte; Bahareh Azizi; Laren M. Tolbert; Kyril M. Solntsev

Green fluorescent protein and related proteins carry chromophores formed within the protein from their own amino acids. Corresponding synthetic compounds are non-fluorescent in solution due to photoinduced isomerization of the benzylideneimidiazolidinone core. Restriction of this internal rotation by binding to host molecules leads to pronounced, up to three orders of magnitude, increase of fluorescence intensity. This property allows using GFP chromophore analogs as fluorogenic dyes to detect metal ions, proteins, nucleic acids, and other hosts. For example, RNA aptamer named Spinach, which binds to and activates fluorescence of some GFP chromophores, was proved to be a unique label for live-cell imaging of specific RNAs, endogenous metabolites and target proteins. Chemically locked GFP chromophores are brightly fluorescent and represent potentially useful dyes due to their small size and high water solubility.


PLOS ONE | 2015

KillerOrange, a Genetically Encoded Photosensitizer Activated by Blue and Green Light

Karen S. Sarkisyan; Olga A. Zlobovskaya; Dmitry A. Gorbachev; Nina G. Bozhanova; George V. Sharonov; Dmitriy B. Staroverov; Evgeny S. Egorov; Anastasia V. Ryabova; Kyril M. Solntsev; Alexander S. Mishin; Konstantin A. Lukyanov

Genetically encoded photosensitizers, proteins that produce reactive oxygen species when illuminated with visible light, are increasingly used as optogenetic tools. Their applications range from ablation of specific cell populations to precise optical inactivation of cellular proteins. Here, we report an orange mutant of red fluorescent protein KillerRed that becomes toxic when illuminated with blue or green light. This new protein, KillerOrange, carries a tryptophan-based chromophore that is novel for photosensitizers. We show that KillerOrange can be used simultaneously and independently from KillerRed in both bacterial and mammalian cells offering chromatic orthogonality for light-activated toxicity.


Scientific Reports | 2012

Tryptophan-based chromophore in fluorescent proteins can be anionic

Karen S. Sarkisyan; Ilia V. Yampolsky; Kyril M. Solntsev; Sergey Lukyanov; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Alexander S. Mishin

Cyan fluorescent proteins (CFP) with tryptophan66-based chromophore are widely used for live cell imaging. In contrast to green and red fluorescent proteins, no charged states of the CFP chromophore have been described. Here, we studied synthetic CFP chromophore and found that its indole group can be deprotonated rather easily (pKa 12.4).We then reproduced this effect in the CFP mCerulean by placing basic amino acids in the chromophore microenvironment. As a result, green-emitting variant with an anionic chromophore and key substitution Val61Lys was obtained. This is the first evidence strongly suggesting that tryptophan-based chromophores in fluorescent proteins can exist in an anionic charged state. Switching between protonated and deprotonated Trp66 in fluorescent proteins represents a new unexplored way to control their spectral properties.


Nano Letters | 2015

Live-Cell STED Microscopy with Genetically Encoded Biosensor

Natalia M. Mishina; Alexander S. Mishin; Yury Belyaev; Ekaterina A. Bogdanova; Sergey Lukyanov; Carsten Schultz; Vsevolod V. Belousov

Of the various super-resolution techniques, stimulated emission depletion (STED) microscopy achieves the best temporal resolution at high spatial resolution, enabling live-cell imaging beyond the diffraction limit. However, STED and most other super-resolution imaging methods utilize a particular type of information extractable from the raw data, namely the positions of fluorophores. To expand on the use of super-resolution techniques, we report here the live-cell STED microscopy of a dynamic biosensor. Using the fluorescent H2O2 sensor HyPer2 for subdiffraction imaging, we were able not only to image filaments with superior resolution by localizing emission but also to trace H2O2 produced within living cell by monitoring brightness of the probe. STED microscopy of HyPer2 demonstrates potential utility of FP-based biosensors for super-resolution experiments in situ and in vivo.


Chemical Communications | 2016

Green-to-red primed conversion of Dendra2 using blue and red lasers

Natalia V. Klementieva; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Nadezhda M. Markina; Sergey Lukyanov; Elena V. Zagaynova; Alexander S. Mishin

Recently, an unusual phenomenon of primed conversion of fluorescent protein Dendra2 by combined action of blue (488 nm) and near-infrared (700-780 nm) lasers was discovered. Here we demonstrate that primed conversion can be induced by red lasers (630-650 nm) common for most confocal and single molecule detection microscopes.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Crystal Structure of Phototoxic Orange Fluorescent Proteins with a Tryptophan-Based Chromophore.

Nadya V. Pletneva; Vladimir Z. Pletnev; Karen S. Sarkisyan; Dmitry A. Gorbachev; Evgeny S. Egorov; Alexander S. Mishin; Konstantin A. Lukyanov; Zbigniew Dauter; Sergei Pletnev

Phototoxic fluorescent proteins represent a sparse group of genetically encoded photosensitizers that could be used for precise light-induced inactivation of target proteins, DNA damage, and cell killing. Only two such GFP-based fluorescent proteins (FPs), KillerRed and its monomeric variant SuperNova, were described up to date. Here, we present a crystallographic study of their two orange successors, dimeric KillerOrange and monomeric mKillerOrange, at 1.81 and 1.57 Å resolution, respectively. They are the first orange-emitting protein photosensitizers with a tryptophan-based chromophore (Gln65-Trp66-Gly67). Same as their red progenitors, both orange photosensitizers have a water-filled channel connecting the chromophore to the β-barrel exterior and enabling transport of ROS. In both proteins, Trp66 of the chromophore adopts an unusual trans-cis conformation stabilized by H-bond with the nearby Gln159. This trans-cis conformation along with the water channel was shown to be a key structural feature providing bright orange emission and phototoxicity of both examined orange photosensitizers.


PLOS ONE | 2015

Fluorescent Protein Based FRET Pairs with Improved Dynamic Range for Fluorescence Lifetime Measurements.

Bobin George Abraham; Karen S. Sarkisyan; Alexander S. Mishin; Ville Santala; Matti Karp

Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) using fluorescent protein variants is widely used to study biochemical processes in living cells. FRET detection by fluorescence lifetime measurements is the most direct and robust method to measure FRET. The traditional cyan-yellow fluorescent protein based FRET pairs are getting replaced by green-red fluorescent protein variants. The green-red pair enables excitation at a longer wavelength which reduces cellular autofluorescence and phototoxicity while monitoring FRET. Despite the advances in FRET based sensors, the low FRET efficiency and dynamic range still complicates their use in cell biology and high throughput screening. In this paper, we utilized the higher lifetime of NowGFP and screened red fluorescent protein variants to develop FRET pairs with high dynamic range and FRET efficiency. The FRET variations were analyzed by proteolytic activity and detected by steady-state and time-resolved measurements. Based on the results, NowGFP-tdTomato and NowGFP-mRuby2 have shown high potentials as FRET pairs with large fluorescence lifetime dynamic range. The in vitro measurements revealed that the NowGFP-tdTomato has the highest Förster radius for any fluorescent protein based FRET pairs yet used in biological studies. The developed FRET pairs will be useful for designing FRET based sensors and studies employing Fluorescence Lifetime Imaging Microscopy (FLIM).

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Konstantin A. Lukyanov

Nizhny Novgorod State Medical Academy

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Nina G. Bozhanova

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Karen S. Sarkisyan

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Elena V. Zagaynova

Nizhny Novgorod State Medical Academy

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Natalia V. Klementieva

Nizhny Novgorod State Medical Academy

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Ilia V. Yampolsky

Russian Academy of Sciences

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Sergey Lukyanov

Russian National Research Medical University

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Kyril M. Solntsev

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Karen S. Sarkisyan

Institute of Science and Technology Austria

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Mikhail S. Baranov

Russian Academy of Sciences

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