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Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate

[Image: see text] Bioluminescence methodologies have been extraordinarily useful due to their high sensitivity, broad dynamic range, and operational simplicity. These capabilities have been realized largely through incremental adaptations of native enzymes and substrates, originating from luminous o...

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Autores principales: Hall, Mary P., Unch, James, Binkowski, Brock F., Valley, Michael P., Butler, Braeden L., Wood, Monika G., Otto, Paul, Zimmerman, Kristopher, Vidugiris, Gediminas, Machleidt, Thomas, Robers, Matthew B., Benink, Hélène A., Eggers, Christopher T., Slater, Michael R., Meisenheimer, Poncho L., Klaubert, Dieter H., Fan, Frank, Encell, Lance P., Wood, Keith V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2012
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3501149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22894855
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb3002478
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author Hall, Mary P.
Unch, James
Binkowski, Brock F.
Valley, Michael P.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wood, Monika G.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kristopher
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Machleidt, Thomas
Robers, Matthew B.
Benink, Hélène A.
Eggers, Christopher T.
Slater, Michael R.
Meisenheimer, Poncho L.
Klaubert, Dieter H.
Fan, Frank
Encell, Lance P.
Wood, Keith V.
author_facet Hall, Mary P.
Unch, James
Binkowski, Brock F.
Valley, Michael P.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wood, Monika G.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kristopher
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Machleidt, Thomas
Robers, Matthew B.
Benink, Hélène A.
Eggers, Christopher T.
Slater, Michael R.
Meisenheimer, Poncho L.
Klaubert, Dieter H.
Fan, Frank
Encell, Lance P.
Wood, Keith V.
author_sort Hall, Mary P.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Bioluminescence methodologies have been extraordinarily useful due to their high sensitivity, broad dynamic range, and operational simplicity. These capabilities have been realized largely through incremental adaptations of native enzymes and substrates, originating from luminous organisms of diverse evolutionary lineages. We engineered both an enzyme and substrate in combination to create a novel bioluminescence system capable of more efficient light emission with superior biochemical and physical characteristics. Using a small luciferase subunit (19 kDa) from the deep sea shrimp Oplophorus gracilirostris, we have improved luminescence expression in mammalian cells ∼2.5 million-fold by merging optimization of protein structure with development of a novel imidazopyrazinone substrate (furimazine). The new luciferase, NanoLuc, produces glow-type luminescence (signal half-life >2 h) with a specific activity ∼150-fold greater than that of either firefly (Photinus pyralis) or Renilla luciferases similarly configured for glow-type assays. In mammalian cells, NanoLuc shows no evidence of post-translational modifications or subcellular partitioning. The enzyme exhibits high physical stability, retaining activity with incubation up to 55 °C or in culture medium for >15 h at 37 °C. As a genetic reporter, NanoLuc may be configured for high sensitivity or for response dynamics by appending a degradation sequence to reduce intracellular accumulation. Appending a signal sequence allows NanoLuc to be exported to the culture medium, where reporter expression can be measured without cell lysis. Fusion onto other proteins allows luminescent assays of their metabolism or localization within cells. Reporter quantitation is achievable even at very low expression levels to facilitate more reliable coupling with endogenous cellular processes.
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spelling pubmed-35011492012-11-20 Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate Hall, Mary P. Unch, James Binkowski, Brock F. Valley, Michael P. Butler, Braeden L. Wood, Monika G. Otto, Paul Zimmerman, Kristopher Vidugiris, Gediminas Machleidt, Thomas Robers, Matthew B. Benink, Hélène A. Eggers, Christopher T. Slater, Michael R. Meisenheimer, Poncho L. Klaubert, Dieter H. Fan, Frank Encell, Lance P. Wood, Keith V. ACS Chem Biol [Image: see text] Bioluminescence methodologies have been extraordinarily useful due to their high sensitivity, broad dynamic range, and operational simplicity. These capabilities have been realized largely through incremental adaptations of native enzymes and substrates, originating from luminous organisms of diverse evolutionary lineages. We engineered both an enzyme and substrate in combination to create a novel bioluminescence system capable of more efficient light emission with superior biochemical and physical characteristics. Using a small luciferase subunit (19 kDa) from the deep sea shrimp Oplophorus gracilirostris, we have improved luminescence expression in mammalian cells ∼2.5 million-fold by merging optimization of protein structure with development of a novel imidazopyrazinone substrate (furimazine). The new luciferase, NanoLuc, produces glow-type luminescence (signal half-life >2 h) with a specific activity ∼150-fold greater than that of either firefly (Photinus pyralis) or Renilla luciferases similarly configured for glow-type assays. In mammalian cells, NanoLuc shows no evidence of post-translational modifications or subcellular partitioning. The enzyme exhibits high physical stability, retaining activity with incubation up to 55 °C or in culture medium for >15 h at 37 °C. As a genetic reporter, NanoLuc may be configured for high sensitivity or for response dynamics by appending a degradation sequence to reduce intracellular accumulation. Appending a signal sequence allows NanoLuc to be exported to the culture medium, where reporter expression can be measured without cell lysis. Fusion onto other proteins allows luminescent assays of their metabolism or localization within cells. Reporter quantitation is achievable even at very low expression levels to facilitate more reliable coupling with endogenous cellular processes. American Chemical Society 2012-08-15 2012-11-16 /pmc/articles/PMC3501149/ /pubmed/22894855 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb3002478 Text en Copyright © 2012 American Chemical Society http://pubs.acs.org This is an open-access article distributed under the ACS AuthorChoice Terms & Conditions. Any use of this article, must conform to the terms of that license which are available at http://pubs.acs.org.
spellingShingle Hall, Mary P.
Unch, James
Binkowski, Brock F.
Valley, Michael P.
Butler, Braeden L.
Wood, Monika G.
Otto, Paul
Zimmerman, Kristopher
Vidugiris, Gediminas
Machleidt, Thomas
Robers, Matthew B.
Benink, Hélène A.
Eggers, Christopher T.
Slater, Michael R.
Meisenheimer, Poncho L.
Klaubert, Dieter H.
Fan, Frank
Encell, Lance P.
Wood, Keith V.
Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title_full Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title_fullStr Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title_full_unstemmed Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title_short Engineered Luciferase Reporter from a Deep Sea Shrimp Utilizing a Novel Imidazopyrazinone Substrate
title_sort engineered luciferase reporter from a deep sea shrimp utilizing a novel imidazopyrazinone substrate
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3501149/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22894855
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/cb3002478
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