Visualizing diverse RNA functions in living cells with the Spinach™ family of fluorogenic aptamers
Speaker: Ryan O’Hanlon
Abstract
RNA is now recognized as a highly diverse and dynamic class of molecules whose localization, processing, and turnover are central to cell function and disease. Live-cell RNA imaging is therefore essential for linking RNA behavior to mechanism. Existing approaches include quenched hybridization probes that directly target endogenous transcripts but face delivery and sequestration issues, protein-recruitment tags such as MS2/PP7 that add large payloads and can perturb localization or decay, and CRISPR–dCas13 imaging that requires substantial protein cargo and careful control of background and off-target effects. Here, we present a protocol for live-cell RNA imaging using the Spinach™ family of fluorogenic RNA aptamers. The method details the design and cloning of Spinach™-tagged RNA constructs, selection and handling of cognate small-molecule fluorophores, expression in mammalian cell lines, dye loading, and image acquisition on standard fluorescence microscopes, followed by quantitative analysis of localization and dynamics. We include controls to verify aptamer expression and signal specificity, guidance for multiplexing with related variants (e.g., Broccoli, Corn, Squash, Beetroot), and troubleshooting for dye permeability and signal optimization. Application examples illustrate use in tracking cellular delivery of mRNA therapeutics, monitoring transcription and decay in response to perturbations, and the formation of toxic RNA aggregates. Compared with prior methods, Spinach(TM) tags are compact, genetically encodable, and fluorogenic, providing high-contrast imaging in both the nucleus and cytoplasm with single-vector simplicity and multiplexing capability. The protocol standardizes key steps to improve robustness and reproducibility across cell types and laboratories.
Highlights:
• This protocol demonstrates the usage of the Spinach™ technology in different RNA-focused applications.
• The protocol can be used to fluorescently image most RNA types in live cells.
• This protocol requires preexisting experience in molecular cloning, cell culturing, and fluorescence microscopy.
• Requires at least seven days to complete from beginning to end.
Speaker

Ryan O’Hanlon, Ph.D.
Research Scientist, Lucerna, Inc.
Dr. Ryan O'Hanlon is currently a Research Scientist and Head of Platform Development at Lucerna, Inc., a New York–based biotechnology company speci...
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Keywords
RNA imaging, Fluorescence microscopy, Fluorogenic RNA, Single-molecule resolution live-cell imaging, Transcription, RNA degradation, RNA aggregation
References
O’Hanlon, R. and Wu, K. Y. (2026). Visualizing diverse RNA functions in living cells with Spinach™ family of fluorogenic aptamers. Bio-protocol 16(11): e5504. DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.5504.
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