iPUT: a minimal-tag probe for imaging putrescine dynamics in cellular homeostasis and stress

Published: 12 March 2026| Version 1 | DOI: 10.17632/mvjdt9xndt.1
Contributor:
Aleksandra Owczarek

Description

Polyamines regulate multiple cellular pathways, yet their cellular distribution remains poorly defined. To overcome limitations of available approaches, we developed iPUT, a clickable putrescine analogue that preserves its native properties and enables bioorthogonal fluorophore conjugation for high-resolution imaging. In MCF-7 cells, unlike fluorophore-conjugated probe BODIPY-PUT, iPUT localized to nuclei, demonstrating the advantage of minimal tagging. In hippocampal co-cultures and acute slices, neurons showed higher iPUT accumulation than astrocytes, challenging the view that glia is the main polyamine reservoir. iPUT accumulation was ATPase transporter-dependent, consistent with enrichment of hippocampal neurons in ATP13A2 carrier. Subcellular distribution differed across models: nuclear enrichment in dividing MCF-7 cells contrasted with extranuclear localization in mature neurons in hippocampal slices. Mimetic hypoxia and excitotoxicity reduced iPUT accumulation in CA1 but not CA2/3 neurons and promoted nuclear redistribution in CA1, suggesting involvement in stress-activated pathways and contribution to higher vulnerability of this region. iPUT is thus a versatile tool for tracking putrescine dynamics, offering new insights into polyamine biology in health and disease.

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Molecular Biology Methods in Neurobiology

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