Hsien-Ming Lee
Academia Sinica
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Featured researches published by Hsien-Ming Lee.
ACS Chemical Biology | 2009
Hsien-Ming Lee; Daniel R. Larson; David S. Lawrence
Biological systems are characterized by a level of spatial and temporal organization that often lies beyond the grasp of present day methods. Light-modulated bioreagents, including analogs of low molecular weight compounds, peptides, proteins, and nucleic acids, represent a compelling strategy to probe, perturb, or sample biological phenomena with the requisite control to address many of these organizational complexities. Although this technology has created considerable excitement in the chemical community, its application to biological questions has been relatively limited. We describe the challenges associated with the design, synthesis, and use of light-responsive bioreagents; the scope and limitations associated with the instrumentation required for their application; and recent chemical and biological advances in this field.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011
Hsien-Ming Lee; Weichen Xu; David S. Lawrence
A strategy for the construction of a profluorescent caged enzyme is described. An active site-directed peptide-based affinity label was designed, synthesized, and employed to covalently label a nonactive site residue in the cAMP-dependent protein kinase. The modified kinase displays minimal catalytic activity and low fluorescence. Photolysis results in partial cleavage of the enzyme-bound affinity label, restoration of enzymatic activity (60-80%) and a strong fluorescent response (10-20 fold). The caged kinase displays analogous behavior in living cells, inducing a light-dependent loss of stress fibers that is characteristic of cAMP action. This strategy furnishes molecularly engineered enzymes that can be remotely controlled in time, space, and total activity.
Journal of Crystal Growth | 2001
Hsien-Ming Lee; Yeong Woo Kim; James K. Baird
Using free-solution capillary electrophoresis, the electrophoretic mobility of micro m-sized lysozyme crystals in their growth solution at 283 K, 1.5%(w/v) NaC1, and over a range of pH values between 3.59 and 5.70 has been measured. Under these conditions, the mobility is independent of crystal size, while the calculated zeta potential increases from +8 to +24 mV as the pH decreases. Since the pH dependence of the zeta potential mirrors the pH dependence of charge on the free molecule, as determined by acid titration, it is concluded that the charge on the crystal is a result of H(+) adsorption from solution.
Angewandte Chemie | 2012
Melanie A. Priestman; Thomas A. Shell; Liang Sun; Hsien-Ming Lee; David S. Lawrence
Falling apart, on cue: Signaling pathways often display a profound spatiotemporal component that is best studied using light-activatable reagents. Three separate photolabile moieties that can be distinguished based upon their response to three distinct wavelengths (360, 440, and 560 nm) have been synthesized and evaluated. This tri-color system is also applied to imaging in microwells and HeLa cells (see picture).
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Hsien-Ming Lee; Melanie A. Priestman; David S. Lawrence
Light-regulatable compounds are finding increasing utility as spatial and temporal probes of biological behavior. An independent measure of successful light-induced structural change is possible when alteration (e.g., activation, deactivation, etc.) of the bioprobe can be directly linked to a fluorescent readout. We have identified a series of photolabile fluorescently quenched cassettes that display extraordinarily large fluorescence enhancements upon photolysis. A pair of cassettes has been inserted into mitochondrial localization sequences to assess an organelle-targeted light-mediated release strategy for controlling biological activity. The peptide constructs are readily absorbed by mitochondria and subsequently can be cleaved in a light-dependent fashion as assessed by the predicted changes in absorbance and fluorescence.
ACS Nano | 2015
Hua-De Gao; Pounraj Thanasekaran; Chao-Wei Chiang; Jia-Lin Hong; Yen-Chun Liu; Yu-Hsu Chang; Hsien-Ming Lee
Photoactivatable (caged) bioeffectors provide a way to remotely trigger or disable biochemical pathways in living organisms at a desired time and location with a pulse of light (uncaging), but the phototoxicity of ultraviolet (UV) often limits its application. In this study, we have demonstrated the near-infrared (NIR) photoactivatable enzyme platform using protein kinase A (PKA), an important enzyme in cell biology. We successfully photoactivated PKA using NIR to phosphorylate its substrate, and this induced a downstream cellular response in living cells with high spatiotemporal resolution. In addition, this system allows NIR to selectively activate the caged enzyme immobilized on the nanoparticle surface without activating other caged proteins in the cytosol. This NIR-responsive enzyme-nanoparticle system provides an innovative approach to remote-control proteins and enzymes, which can be used by researchers who need to avoid direct UV irradiation or use UV as a secondary channel to turn on a bioeffector.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Aya Wakata; Hsien-Ming Lee; Philipp Rommel; Alexei Toutchkine; Marion Schmidt; David S. Lawrence
The proteasome, a multicatalytic protease, displays distinct chymotrypsin-like, caspase-like, and trypsin-like activities at three different subunits of the multimeric complex. Fluorescent substrates for each of these active sites have been described. However, since the fluorescent properties of these substrates are very similar, it is not possible to simultaneously monitor catalysis of two or more activities. We have developed a long wavelength (lambda(ex) = 600 nm, lambda(em) = 700 nm) fluorescent substrate for the chymotrypsin-like active site via a combinatorial library strategy. This peptide-based substrate is a highly selective proteasomal chymotrypsin-like sensor, as assessed by a series of proteasomal active site mutants in yeast cell lysates. A corresponding caged analog of the sensor has been prepared, which is resistant to proteolysis until activated by 349 nm light. The latter affords the opportunity to assess proteasomal activity with a high degree of temporal control. The distinct photophysical properties of the sensor allow the chymotrypsin-like activity to be simultaneously monitored during caspase-like or trypsin-like catalysis. We have found that chymotrypsin-like activity is enhanced in the presence of the trypsin-like substrate but reduced in the presence of caspase-like substrate. Furthermore, the chymotrypsin-like sensor hinders the activity of both the caspase- and trypsin-like active sites. Coincident monitoring of two catalytic active sites furnishes two-thirds coverage of total proteasomal activity, which should provide the means to address if and how the distinct active sites of the proteasome influence one another during catalysis.
ACS Applied Bio Materials | 2018
Tzu-Ho Chen; Shuwei Zhang; Meghnath Jaishi; Rashmi Adhikari; Jianheng Bi; Mingxi Fang; Shuai Xia; Yibin Zhang; Rudy L. Luck; Ranjit Pati; Hsien-Ming Lee; Fen-Tair Luo; Ashutosh Tiwari; Haiying Liu
Two near-infrared luminescent probes with Stokes-shift and single-photon anti-Stokes-shift fluorescence properties for sensitive determination of pH variance in lysosomes have been synthesized. A morpholine residue in probe A which serves as a targeting group for lysosomes in viable cells was attached to the fluorophores via a spirolactam moiety while a mannose residue was ligated to probe B resulting in increased biocompatibility and solubility in water. Probes A and B contain closed spirolactam moieties, and show no Stokes-shift or anti-Stokes-shift fluorescence under neutral or alkali conditions. However, the probes incrementally react to pH variance from 7.22 to 2.76 with measurable increases in both Stokes-shift and anti-Stokes-shift fluorescence at 699 nm and 693 nm under 645 nm and 800 nm excitation, respectively. This acid-activated fluorescence is produced by the breaking of the probe spirolactam moiety, which greatly increased overall π-conjugation in the probes. These probes possess upconversion near-infrared fluorescence imaging advantages including minimum cellular photo-damage, tissue penetration, and minimum biological fluorescence background. They display excellent photostability with low dye photobleaching and show good biocompatibility. They are selective and capable of detecting pH variances in lysosomes at excitation with two different wavelengths, i.e., 645 and 800 nm.
ACS Nano | 2018
Golam Haider; Hung-I Lin; Kanchan Yadav; Kun-Ching Shen; Yu-Ming Liao; Han Wen Hu; Pradip Kumar Roy; Krishna Prasad Bera; Kung-Hsuan Lin; Hsien-Ming Lee; Yit-Tsong Chen; Fu-Rong Chen; Yang-Fang Chen
Production of multicolor or multiple wavelength lasers over the full visible-color spectrum from a single chip device has widespread applications, such as superbright solid-state lighting, color laser displays, light-based version of Wi-Fi (Li-Fi), and bioimaging, etc. However, designing such lasing devices remains a challenging issue owing to the material requirements for producing multicolor emissions and sophisticated design for producing laser action. Here we demonstrate a simple design and highly efficient single segment white random laser based on solution-processed NaYF4:Yb/Er/Tm@NaYF4:Eu core-shell nanoparticles assisted by Au/MoO3 multilayer hyperbolic meta-materials. The multicolor lasing emitted from core-shell nanoparticles covering the red, green, and blue, simultaneously, can be greatly enhanced by the high photonic density of states with a suitable design of hyperbolic meta-materials, which enables decreasing the energy consumption of photon propagation. As a result, the energy upconversion emission is enhanced by ∼50 times with a drastic reduction of the lasing threshold. The multiple scatterings arising from the inherent nature of the disordered nanoparticle matrix provide a convenient way for the formation of closed feedback loops, which is beneficial for the coherent laser action. The experimental results were supported by the electromagnetic simulations derived from the finite-difference time-domain (FDTD) method. The approach shown here can greatly simplify the design of laser structures with color-tunable emissions, which can be extended to many other material systems. Together with the characteristics of angle free laser action, our device provides a promising solution toward the realization of many laser-based practical applications.
Journal of Visualized Experiments | 2017
Hua-De Gao; Pounraj Thanasekaran; Tzu-Ho Chen; Yu-Hsu Chang; Yu-Ju Chen; Hsien-Ming Lee
Upconversion nanoparticle (UCNP)-mediated photoactivation is a new approach to remotely control bioeffectors with much less phototoxicity and with deeper tissue penetration. However, the existing instrumentation on the market is not readily compatible with upconversion application. Therefore, modifying the commercially available instrument is essential for this research. In this paper, we first illustrate the modifications of a conventional fluorimeter and fluorescence microscope to make them compatible for photon upconversion experiments. We then describe the synthesis of a near-infrared (NIR)-triggered caged protein kinase A catalytic subunit (PKA) immobilized on a UCNP complex. Parameters for microinjection and NIR photoactivation procedures are also reported. After the caged PKA-UCNP is microinjected into REF52 fibroblast cells, the NIR irradiation, which is significantly superior to conventional UV irradiation, efficiently triggers the PKA signal transduction pathway in living cells. In addition, positive and negative control experiments confirm that the PKA-induced pathway leading to the disintegration of stress fibers is specifically triggered by NIR irradiation. Thus, the use of protein-modified UCNP provides an innovative approach to remotely control light-modulated cellular experiments, in which direct exposure to UV light must be avoided.