Fluorescence-Based Technique for Analyzing Retinoic Acid
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Retinoic acid (RA) is a potent transcriptional activator whose actions are mediated by members of the nuclear hormone receptor
family. In addition to playing key roles in embryonic development and in tissue maintenance in the adult, RA is a potent anticarcinogenic
agent currently in clinical use for treatment of various cancers. Here, we describe an optical method for measuring the concentrations
of RA in biological samples. This method uses cellular retinoic acid-binding protein I (CRABP-I), a protein that binds RA
with high affinity and specificity, as a “read-out” for its ligand. Replacing 28
Leu of CRABP-I with a Cys residue allows for covalently attaching an environmentally sensitive fluorescent probe to the protein
at a region that undergoes a significant conformational change upon ligand binding. Association of RA with the modified protein
thus results in changes in the fluorescence of the probe, enabling reliable measurements of RA concentrations as low as 50
nM. We show that the method can be effectively used to measure RA concentrations in serum and to monitor the biosynthesis
and the degradation of RA in cultured mammalian cells.