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Dive into the research topics where Masahiro Abo is active.

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Featured researches published by Masahiro Abo.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Development of a Highly Sensitive Fluorescence Probe for Hydrogen Peroxide

Masahiro Abo; Yasuteru Urano; Kenjiro Hanaoka; Takuya Terai; Toru Komatsu; Tetsuo Nagano

Hydrogen peroxide is believed to play a role in cellular signal transduction by reversible oxidation of proteins. Here, we report the design and synthesis of a novel fluorescence probe for hydrogen peroxide, utilizing a photoinduced electron transfer strategy based on benzil chemistry to control the fluorescence. The practical value of this highly sensitive and selective fluorescence probe, NBzF, was confirmed by its application to imaging of hydrogen peroxide generation in live RAW 264.7 macrophages. NBzF was also employed for live cell imaging of hydrogen peroxide generated as a signaling molecule in A431 human epidermoid carcinoma cells.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

A Caged Electrophilic Probe for Global Analysis of Cysteine Reactivity in Living Cells.

Masahiro Abo; Eranthie Weerapana

Cysteine residues are subject to diverse modifications, such as oxidation, nitrosation, and lipidation. The resulting loss in cysteine reactivity can be measured using electrophilic chemical probes, which importantly provide the stoichiometry of modification. An iodoacetamide (IA)-based chemical probe has been used to concurrently quantify reactivity changes in hundreds of cysteines within cell lysates. However, the cytotoxicity of the IA group precludes efficient live-cell labeling, which is important for preserving transient cysteine modifications. To overcome this limitation, a caged bromomethyl ketone (BK) electrophile was developed, which shows minimal cytotoxicity and provides spatial and temporal control of electrophile activation through irradiation. The caged-BK probe was utilized to monitor cysteine reactivity changes in A431 cells upon epidermal growth factor (EGF)-stimulated release of cellular reactive oxygen species. Decreased reactivity was observed for cysteines known to form sulfenic acids and redox-active disulfides. Importantly, the caged-BK platform provided the first quantification of intracellular disulfide bond formation upon EGF stimulation. In summary, the caged-BK probe is a powerful tool to identify reactivity changes associated with diverse cysteine modifications, including oxidation, metal chelation, and inhibitor binding, within a physiologically relevant context.


Analytical Chemistry | 2014

Visualization of Phagosomal Hydrogen Peroxide Production by a Novel Fluorescent Probe That Is Localized via SNAP-tag Labeling

Masahiro Abo; Reiko Minakami; Kei Miyano; Mako Kamiya; Tetsuo Nagano; Yasuteru Urano; Hideki Sumimoto

Hydrogen peroxide (H2O2), a member of reactive oxygen species (ROS), plays diverse physiological roles including host defense and cellular signal transduction. During ingestion of invading microorganisms, professional phagocytes such as macrophages release H2O2 specifically into the phagosome to direct toxic ROS toward engulfed microbes. Although H2O2 is considered to exert discrete effects in living systems depending on location of its production, accumulation, and consumption, there have been limitations of techniques for probing this oxygen metabolite with high molecular specificity at the subcellular resolution. Here we describe the development of an O(6)-benzylguanine derivative of 5-(4-nitrobenzoyl)carbonylfluorescein (NBzF-BG), a novel H2O2-specific fluorescent probe; NBzF-BG is covalently and selectively conjugated with the SNAP-tag protein, leading to formation of the fluorophore-protein conjugate (SNAP-NBzF). SNAP-NBzF rapidly reacts with H2O2 and thereby shows a 9-fold enhancement in fluorescence. When SNAP-tag is expressed in HEK293T cells and RAW264.7 macrophages as a protein C-terminally fused to the transmembrane domain of platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), the tag is presented on the outside of the plasma membrane; conjugation of NBzF-BG with the cell surface SNAP-tag enables detection of H2O2 added exogenously. We also demonstrate molecular imaging of H2O2 that is endogenously produced in phagosomes of macrophages ingesting IgG-coated latex beads. Thus, NBzF-BG, combined with the SNAP-tag technology, should be useful as a tool to measure local production of H2O2 in living cells.


Molecular Pharmaceutics | 2017

Isotopically-Labeled Iodoacetamide-Alkyne Probes for Quantitative Cysteine-Reactivity Profiling

Masahiro Abo; Chun Li; Eranthie Weerapana

Cysteine residues on proteins serve a variety of catalytic and regulatory functions due to the high nucleophilicity and redox activity of the thiol group. Quantitative proteomic platforms for profiling cysteine reactivity can provide valuable information related to the post-translational modification state and inhibitor occupancy of functional cysteine residues within a complex proteome. Cysteine-reactivity profiling typically monitors changes in the extent of cysteine labeling by cysteine-reactive chemical probes, such as iodoacetamide (IA)-alkyne. To enable accurate measurements of cysteine reactivity changes, isotopic labels are introduced into the two proteomes of interest using either isotopically tagged proteomes (SILAC) or cleavable linkers (isoTOP-ABPP) that are installed using copper-catalyzed azide-alkyne cycloaddition (CuAAC). Here we provide an alternative strategy for isotopic tagging of two proteomes for cysteine-reactivity profiling by developing IA-light and IA-heavy, a pair of isotopically labeled iodoacetamide-alkyne probes. These probes can be utilized for proteome samples that are not amenable to SILAC labeling and are facile to synthesize, especially when compared to the isotopically tagged cleavable linkers. We confirm the quantitative accuracy of IA-light and IA-heavy by assessing cysteine reactivity in a purified thioredoxin protein, as well as globally within a complex proteome where IA-light treatment generates mass-spectrometry identification of 992 cysteine residues. Importantly, these isotopically tagged probes can also be utilized for quantifying the percentage of cysteine modification within a single sample. Preliminary data supports the use of these tags to quantify the stoichiometry of TCEP-susceptible cysteine oxidation events in cell lysates.


ChemBioChem | 2017

Optimization of Caged Electrophiles for Improved Monitoring of Cysteine Reactivity in Living Cells.

Masahiro Abo; Daniel W. Bak; Eranthie Weerapana

Cysteine residues play critical roles in protein function and are susceptible to numerous post‐translational modifications (PTMs) that serve to modulate the activity and localization of diverse proteins. Many of these PTMs are highly transient and labile, thus necessitating methods to study these modifications directly within the context of living cells. We previously reported a caged electrophilic probe, CBK1, that can be activated by UV for temporally controlled covalent modification of cysteine residues in living cells. To improve upon the number of cysteine residues identified in cellular cysteine‐profiling studies, the reactivity and uncaging efficiency of a panel of caged electrophiles were explored. We identified an optimized caged electrophilic probe, CIK4, that affords significantly improved coverage of cellular cysteine residues. The broader proteome coverage afforded by CIK4 renders it a useful tool for the biological investigation of cysteine‐reactivity changes and PTMs directly within living cells and highlights design elements that are critical to optimizing photoactivatable chemical probes for cellular labeling.


Chemical Communications | 2012

A reversible near-infrared fluorescence probe for reactive oxygen species based on Te–rhodamine

Yuichiro Koide; Mitsuyasu Kawaguchi; Yasuteru Urano; Kenjiro Hanaoka; Toru Komatsu; Masahiro Abo; Takuya Terai; Tetsuo Nagano


Archive | 2009

FLUORESCENT PROBE SPECIFIC TO HYDROGEN PEROXIDE

Tetsuo Nagano; Yasuteru Urano; Masahiro Abo


Free Radical Biology and Medicine | 2010

Development of a Fluorescence Probe for Hydrogen Peroxide

Masahiro Abo; Yasuteru Urano; Tetsuo Nagano


Archive | 2009

Sonde fluorescente spécifique du peroxyde d'hydrogène

Tetsuo Nagano; 哲雄 長野; Yasuteru Urano; 泰照 浦野; Masahiro Abo; 真裕 安保


生物物理 | 2008

3P-321 ヒドロペルオキシド特異的蛍光プローブの開発と細胞応用(バイオイメージング(2),第46回日本生物物理学会年会)

Masahiro Abo; Yasuteru Urano; Tetsuo Nagano

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