Techniques for generating a library of short peptides that can activate mast cells via the MRGPRX2 receptor are described. Associated techniques are easy, inexpensive, and can be extended to other cell receptors.
Identifying ligands specific to therapeutically significant cell receptors is crucial for many applications, including the design and development of new therapeutics. Mas related G-protein receptor-X2 (MRGPRX2) is an important receptor that regulates mast cell activation and, thus, directs the general immune response. Numerous ligands for MRGPRX2 have been identified and include endogenous peptides like PAMPs, defensins, LL-37 and other protein fragments (i.e., degraded albumin). Further identification of MRGPRX2 specific ligands requires the screening of a large number of peptides (i.e., peptide library); however, mast cells are difficult and expensive to maintain in vitro and, therefore, not economical to use for screening large numbers of molecules. The present paper demonstrates a method to design, develop, and screen a library of small peptide molecules using MRGPRX2 expressing HEK cells. This cell line is relatively easy and inexpensive to maintain and can be used for in vitro high-throughput analysis. A calcium sensitive Fura-2 fluorescent dye to mark intracellular calcium flux upon activation was used to monitor the activation. The ratio of fluorescence intensity of Fura-2 at 510 nm against excitation wavelengths of 340 and 380 nm was used to calculate calcium concentration. The peptide library used to verify this system was based on the endogenous proadrenomedullin N-terminal 12 (PAMP-12) secretagogue, which is known to bind MRGPRX2 with high specificity and affinity. Subsequent peptides were generated through amino acid truncation and alanine scanning techniques applied to PAMP-12. The method described here is simple and inexpensive yet robust for screening a large library of compounds to identify binding domains and other important parameters that play an important role in receptor activation.
Mast cells are an integral part of the immune system and play a crucial role in both innate and adaptive immune responses. Mast cells are primarily activated either by the binding of an antigen to the immunoglobulin E (IgE) – FcεRI receptor complex, or by the recently discovered mas related G-protein receptor-X2 (MRGPRX2)1. MRGPRX2 activation has been linked to several immune and inflammatory diseases, and hence, it is important to understand the binding mechanism of the receptor to its ligands2. To do so, a library of small peptide molecules was developed and screened against MRGPRX2 receptors that were overexpressed in HEK cells. In the study, the peptide library was constructed using the simple and versatile techniques of alanine scanning and amino acid truncation. Alanine scanning involves replacing specific amino acids with an alanine residue. Alanine being small and neutral, strips the peptide of the specific properties conferred by the replaced residue and consecutively highlights the significance of the respective physiochemical properties of the amino acid in receptor interactions. On the contrary, in amino acid truncation, peptide sequences are designed such that it lacks one or more amino acid residues from the N-terminal, C terminal, or both. This set of peptides was used to identify the amino acid sequences crucial to MRGPRX2 binding.
Experience with human mast cells lines (LAD-2) has shown that these cells are difficult to culture and maintain in vitro: a doubling time of two weeks, expensive medium supplements, and direct attention required during passaging3. These attributes make the cells unsuitable for large scale screening of potential ligands. Herein, stably transfected HEK cells expressing MRGPRX2 receptor (HEK-X2) were used to screen the peptide library1. HEK-293 cells are widely used and studied for the heterologous expression of surface receptors due to their high transfection efficiency, faster doubling rate, and the need for non-expensive medium supplements to be cultured in laboratory4. The protocol to transfect HEK-293 cell line has been demonstrated and is well established5. HEK-293 cells stably expressing MRGPRX2 receptor (passage 13-19) were activated with the peptides generated through N-truncation, C-truncation, N+C-truncation, and alanine scanning1. Wild type HEK cells (HEK-WT) (passage 16-21) were used as control. Intracellular calcium release upon activation was monitored to study the MRGPRX2 based activation.
Cell activation by MRGPRX2 is followed by a cytosolic calcium mobilization. This regulated intracellular calcium release in mast cells is regulated by the store operated calcium entry (SOCE), coordinated by the stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1); and is central to the immune response cascade6,7. Various methods have been used to detect intracellular calcium concentration, including patch-clamps and fluorescent dyes8. Of all the techniques available, fluorometric calcium dyes in conjugation with various detection techniques are being widely used9. Two types of fluorometric dyes that have gained interests are namely, single wavelength dyes like Fluo-4, and dual wavelength ratiometric dyes like Indo -1 and Fura-2. The advantage that dual wavelength ratiometric dyes bring over single wavelength dyes is that the ratiometric dyes correct for experimental errors like dye loading, photo bleaching, and focusing10,11.
Fura-2 acetoxymethyl ester (Fura-2 AM) is a cell permeating, green-fluorescent dye whose excitation shifts to a lower wavelength upon calcium-binding. Experimentally, Fura-2 is excited at 340 and 380 nm, while the emission is recorded at 510 nm. Upon calcium binding, the fluorescent intensity at 340 nm increases while that of 380 nm decreases, as shown in Figure 1. Data is represented as a ratio of fluorescence intensity after excitation at 340 nm (F340) to that of intensity after excitation at 380 nm (F380) i.e., F340/F380. The F340/F380 ratio is proportional to intracellular calcium, the value of which can be calculated by the Grynkiewicz equation12. Since the fluorescence signal is obtained from the excitation of the dye at two wavelengths (340 nm and 380 nm), the ratio of the fluorescence signals corrects for experimental factors like dye loading, dye leakage, photobleaching, and cell densities.
1. Design and development of peptide library
2. In vitro cell culture
3. Fura-2 AM calcium assay
4. Cell activation and fluorescent reading
NOTE: Fluorescence plate reader with an automated pipetting system allows for the automatic transfer of compounds from a compound source to the assay plate without taking the plate out of the plate reader.
5. Data analysis
Table 1 contains the peptide sequences generated through terminal amino acid truncation and alanine scanning. As shown in Table 1, peptide sequence RKKWNKWALSR lacks N-terminal phenylalanine (F) with respect to its parent PAMP-12 and hence is a representative peptide in N-truncated library. Similarly, in FRKKWNKWALS, PAMP-12 C-terminal serine has been removed, representing a C-truncated peptide library derived from PAMP-12. In N+C-truncated peptide library, amino acid from both N and C-terminal are removed. Truncation of 4 amino acid from N-terminal and 1 residue from C-terminal of PAMP-12 results in WNKWALS. Peptide library derived from alanine scanning has one amino acid replaced with alanine, as with ARKKWNKWALSR, where N-terminal phenylalanine is replaced with alanine. Fura-2 AM dye was used to study the activation potential of peptides against MRGPRX2 transfected HEK cells1. The data was recorded on a fluorescence plate reader. If the peptide ligand activated the cell, the fluorescence pumped at 340 nm (F340) increases, while the same decreases for 380 nm wavelength (F380) (Figure 1a). For a blank (or for that matter non activating peptide or HEK-WT control) however, the relative increase and decrease would be respectively low, as shown in the Figure 2a. Calcium concentration is, however, represented by F340/F380 ratio as shown in Figure 1b,2b. The ratio F340/F380 can be further substituted in the Grynkiewicz equation to get the calcium concentration using in situ calibrations (Figure 3). The peptides listed in Table 1 were characterized by mass spectroscopy (Figure 4a) and HPLC (Figure 4b) and found to be of high purity.
Peptide Technique | Representative Peptide |
Parent peptide | Ac-FRKKWNKWALSR-Amide |
N-Truncation | Ac-RKKWNKWALSR-Amide |
C-Truncation | Ac-FRKKWNKWALS-Amide |
N+C-Truncation | Ac-WNKWALS-Amide |
Alanine Scanning | Ac-ARKKWNKWALSR-Amide |
Table 1: Representative peptide sequences generated after N, C and N+C – truncation, and alanine scanning. The N-terminal of the peptides were acetyl modified while the C-Terminal contained an amide group.
Figure 1: Representative data for an activating peptide. (a) The fluorescence signals for an activating peptide. Represented data corresponds to PAMP-12 (FRKKWNKWALSR). Peptide was added after generating a baseline for 10 reading cycles (36 s), as shown by the arrow. (b) The ratio of the fluorescence emission after excitation at 340 nm (F340) to that of fluorescence emission after excitation at 380 nm (F380) (F340/F380). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Representative data for the blank. (a) The fluorescence signals for the Blank. HTB was added after generating a baseline for 10 reading cycles (36 s), as shown by the arrow. (b) The ratio of the fluorescence emission after excitation at 340 nm (F340) to that of fluorescence emission after excitation at 380 nm (F380) (F340/F380). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Representative data for the standards for dye calibration. (a) Ionomycin was added at 10th readings, as shown by the arrow, to get maximum fluorescence in Ca+2 bound state. EGTA-Triton X-100 was added after 20 readings, as shown by the arrow, to get a minimum signal. (b) The ratio of the fluorescence emission after excitation at 340 nm (F340) to that of fluorescence emission after excitation at 380 nm (F380) (F340/F380). These values are further put in the Grynkiewicz equation to get the intracellular calcium concentration. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Characterization of a representative peptide to confirm the sequence and purity. (a) The theoretical mass of the representative peptide sequence WNKWAL was 857.90 Da, which was shown by the m/z ratio in mass spectroscopy. (b) Peptide's purity of 99% as confirmed by HPLC. This peptide belongs to N+C-truncated peptide library. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Calcium signaling is central to mast cell degranulation and has been widely used in the study of receptor-ligand interactions, ligand identification, and drug discovery14. MRGPRX2 is a recently discovered mast cell receptor that has been found to play a key role in many inflammatory diseases like itch, asthma, and atopic dermatitis, among others2. Furthermore, several approved drugs have been shown to elicit an inflammatory response through the MRGPRX2 receptor15. It is, therefore, imperative to study the ligand-receptor interaction, identify new ligands, and understand the activation mechanism. This study shows the use of common peptide techniques in designing a peptide library (Table 1) and in studying the MRGPRX2 based mast cell activation. The underlying calcium mobilization was employed as the indicator of mast cell activation.
Fura-2 is a calcium sensitive dye used to measure intracellular calcium concentration. The acetoxymethyl ester variant (Fura-2 AM) increases the permeability of the cell membrane yielding an easy method for quantifying the cytoplasmic calcium releases. The dye has frequently been used with various characterization techniques like flow cytometer, microscopy, and fluorimeters9,16,17. Though widely used, there are challenges associated with the dye, which need to be addressed before these can be efficiently employed. Intracellular calcium binding relies on the de-esterification of the dye, which is largely dependent on the dye loading conditions, cell system, and cell culture types. Partial de-esterification results in inadequate fluorescence signals. Furthermore, incomplete de-esterification also results in the localization of dye into the cell organelles resulting in inaccurate data. Leakage of de-esterified dye from the cell is another issue faced with Fura-210,11.
Apart from the dye loading, the use of the detection technique also plays an important role. The inability of flow cytometers to operate with UV lasers makes them unfavorable for the dye9. Similarly, fluorescent imaging techniques require advanced training in microscope operation. The transient nature of calcium release upon ligand activation requires a rapid response in the change in wavelengths and thus a faster shutter speed of the microscope. In addition, the use of specialized cell imaging chambers, use of coverslips and constant image focusing makes it a cumbersome technique for large-scale screening16.
A significant amount of time was invested in the method optimization. Cuvette based fluorometer, wherein cells after detaching from the culture flask, were incubated with the dye-loaded medium in the dark and then were washed and resuspended in the HTB buffer for the study. Cells suspended in HTB buffer were taken in a cuvette and were read using a photomultiplier based fluorometer. The detection systems could only hold few (2-4) cuvettes at a time and thus was not suitable for the large-scale screening of peptides. Further, HEK cells being adherent cells, the cell suspension reading showed great variations within individual repeats within an experiment. Consequently, fluorescent imaging technique was used, which again proved to be tedious and slow. The requirement for an advanced microscope with fast wavelength changing capability, microscope-specific cell chambers, and excellent imaging skills impeded the study. Additionally, in situ peptide simulation was time extensive and resulted in the loss of important data. Inefficient cell processing technique resulted in cell flotations during readings which made it difficult to focus and gave inconsistent results.
A fluorescence plate reader system with an automated pipetting system that can dispense compounds during experiments was used for the study. The fact that many samples are read in quick succession in a 96 well plate is an added benefit of this technique. The results showed that the readings were more consistent when cells were attached as compared to suspension. Cell counts of 40,000 cells/well in a TC-treated 96 well plate grown for a day gave the best results. A dye incubation time of 30-40 min at 37 °C incubator was optimum. However, when experiments were done with experimental repeats, variations in the corresponding wells of different columns were observed. To overcome this, a positive (PAMP-12) and a negative control (Blank) for each column of the plate was used. This gave more consistent and reproducible data. The method described here is an easy and versatile method, which can be efficiently employed for large-scale calcium-based screening. However, there are several factors which determines the quality of data and thus the method needs to be optimized for a given cell-instrument system.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
SR and LDU would like to acknowledge Alberta Innovates Strategic Research Project, NRC, and NSERC-Discovery grant for this project.
Bovine Serum Albumin | Sigma Aldrich | 5470 | |
Calcium Chloride | Sigma Aldrich | 793939 | |
Corning 96 Well | Sigma Aldrich | CLS3603 | |
Black Polystyrene Microplate | Sigma Aldrich | CLS3603 | |
DMEM | Thermo Fischer | 11995065 | High Glucose |
DMSO | Thermo Fischer | D12345 | Sterile, biological grade |
EGTA | Sigma Aldrich | E3889 | |
Fetal Bovine Serum | Thermo Fischer | 12483-020 | |
Flexstation 3 | Molecular devices | FV06060 | |
Fura-2 AM | Thermo Fischer | F1221 | |
Glucose | Sigma Aldrich | D8270 | |
HEPES buffer | Thermo Fischer | 15630-080 | |
Ionomycin | Sigma Aldrich | I9657 | |
L Glutamine | Thermo Fischer | 25030-081 | |
Pen Strep | Thermo Fischer | 15140122 | |
Peptides | RS Syntehsis | Custom | ≥95% pure; N terminal – acetyl group C terminal – amide group |
Potassium Chloride | Sigma Aldrich | 12636 | |
Sodium Chloride | Sigma Aldrich | S9888 | |
TritonX-100 | DOW Chemical | 166704 |