Tandem fluorescent protein timers for non-invasive relative protein lifetime measurement in plants
Targeted protein degradation is an important and pervasive regulatory mechanism in plants, required for perception and response to the environment as well as developmental signalling. Despite the significance of this process, relatively few studies have assessed plant protein turnover in a quantitative fashion. Tandem fluorescent protein timers (tFTs) offer a powerful approach for the assessment of in vivo protein turnover in distinct subcellular compartments of single or multiple cells. A tFT is a fusion of two different fluorescent proteins with distinct fluorophore maturation kinetics, which enable protein age to be estimated from the ratio of fluorescence intensities of the two fluorescent proteins. Here, we use short-lived auxin signalling proteins and model N-end rule pathway reporters to demonstrate the utility of tFTs for studying protein turnover in living plants. We present transient expression of tFTs as an efficient screen for relative protein lifetime, useful for testing the effects of mutations and different genetic backgrounds on protein stability, and demonstrate the potential for using stably expressed tFTs to study native protein dynamics with high temporal resolution in response to exogenous or endogenous stimuli.
| Item Type | Article |
|---|---|
| Open Access | Gold |
| Keywords | Protein lifetime, Proteostasis, Arabidopsi, Tobacco, Fluorescent protein |
| Project | Tailoring Plant Metabolism (TPM) - Work package 1 (WP1) - High value lipids for health and industry, Substrates of the N-end rule of targeted protein degradation |
| Date Deposited | 05 Dec 2025 10:06 |
| Last Modified | 21 Jan 2026 17:21 |


