Finding Fyn

A new biosensor has been developed to study a signaling protein associated with cancer and Alzheimer’s disease.

A newly created biosensor shows the activity of a signaling protein called Fyn to be localized to a specific part of the cell where it pulses on and off. Image credit: Ananya Mukherjee (CC BY 4.0)

Cells contain networks of signaling proteins that can respond to a variety of cues from the surrounding environment. Often the cell’s response to these cues is not just controlled by the level of protein, but by changing the activity of signaling proteins. For example, a signaling protein in humans and other mammals known as Fyn regulates a number of different processes, including when a cell grows, dies, or develops a specialist role.

Defects in the activity of Fyn are associated with several diseases in humans including cancer and Alzheimer’s disease. However, it remains unclear how Fyn contributes to these diseases, or how the protein is able to precisely coordinate responses to multiple different cues in healthy individuals. This is largely because there are no readily available tools that are able to specifically detect where and when this protein is active in cells.

Researchers often use fluorescent proteins called biosensors as tools to detect where specific proteins are located in living cells over time. Now, Mukherjee, Singh et al. have developed a new biosensor named FynSensor to monitor the active form of Fyn in mammalian cells.

Microscopy imaging of FynSensor in several different cell types showed that although Fyn was present everywhere, it was only active in certain areas. In these areas the protein switched between an active and inactive state, with clear ‘pulses’ of signaling activity lasting a couple of minutes in response to specific cues. These areas of high Fyn activity behaved like signaling hubs in which several different cues integrate together before Fyn triggers an appropriate cell response.

These results shed light on how Fyn is able to precisely control many different processes in cells. In the future, FynSensor could be used to rapidly screen for drug-like molecules to treat cancer, Alzheimer’s disease and other conditions linked with defects in Fyn activity. Furthermore, the FynSensor could be adapted to allow researchers to study other signaling proteins in humans and other animals.