共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 0 毫秒
1.
B R Branchini R A Magyar M H Murtiashaw S M Anderson L C Helgerson M Zimmer 《Biochemistry》1999,38(40):13223-13230
Under physiological conditions firefly luciferase catalyzes the highly efficient emission of yellow-green light from the substrates luciferin, Mg-ATP, and oxygen. In nature, bioluminescence emission by beetle luciferases is observed in colors ranging from green (approximately 530 nm) to red (approximately 635 nm), yet all known luciferases use the same luciferin substrate. In an earlier report [Branchini, B. R., Magyar, R. M., Murtiashaw, M. H., Anderson, S. M., and Zimmer, M. (1998) Biochemistry 37, 15311-15319], we described the effects of mutations at His245 on luciferase activity. In the context of molecular modeling results, we proposed that His245 is located at the luciferase active site. We noted too that the H245 mutants displayed red-shifted bioluminescent emission spectra. We report here the construction and purification of additional His245 mutants, as well as mutants at residues Lys529 and Thr343, all of which are stringently conserved in the beetle luciferase sequences. Analysis of specific activity and steady-state kinetic constants suggested that these residues are involved in luciferase catalysis and the productive binding of substrates. Bioluminescence emission spectroscopy studies indicated that point mutations at His245 and Thr343 produced luciferases that emitted light over the color range from green to red. The results of mutational and biochemical studies with luciferase reported here have enabled us to propose speculative mechanisms for color determination in firefly bioluminescence. An essential role for Thr343, the participation of His245 and Arg218, and the involvement of bound AMP are indicated. 相似文献
2.
A model for the spatial structure of firefly luciferase--ATP--luciferin complex is suggested using the coordinates of unliganded luciferase and the enzyme--substrate complex of the adenylating subunit of gramicidin S synthetase known from the literature. Conformational changes in luciferase can occur during substrate binding resulting in a relative orientation of two luciferase domains similar to that in case of the AMP--phenylalanine--synthetase complex. The model is consistent with data on the physicochemical properties of firefly luciferase and its complexes with the substrates. 相似文献
3.
Hydrophobic nature of the active site of firefly luciferase 总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1
M DeLuca 《Biochemistry》1969,8(1):160-166
4.
Inoue Y Sheng F Kiryu S Watanabe M Ratanakanit H Izawa K Tojo A Ohtomo K 《Molecular imaging》2011,10(5):377-385
Gaussia luciferase (Gluc) is a secreted reporter, and its expression in living animals can be assessed by in vivo bioluminescence imaging (BLI) or blood assays. We characterized Gluc as an in vivo reporter in comparison with firefly luciferase (Fluc). Mice were inoculated subcutaneously with tumor cells expressing both Fluc and Gluc and underwent Fluc BLI, Gluc BLI, blood assays of Gluc activity, and caliper measurement. In Gluc BLI, the signal from the tumor peaked immediately and then decreased rapidly. In the longitudinal monitoring, all measures indicated an increase in tumor burden early after cell inoculation. However, the increase reached plateaus in Gluc BLI and Fluc BLI despite a continuous increase in the caliper measurement and Gluc blood assay. Significant correlations were found between the measures, and the correlation between the blood signal and caliper volume was especially high. Gluc allows tumor monitoring in mice and should be applicable to dual-reporter assessment in combination with Fluc. The Gluc blood assay appears to provide a reliable indicator of viable tumor burden, and the combination of a blood assay and in vivo BLI using Gluc should be promising for quantifying and localizing the tumors. 相似文献
5.
Branchini BR Ablamsky DM Rosenman JM Uzasci L Southworth TL Zimmer M 《Biochemistry》2007,46(48):13847-13855
Light emission from the North American firefly Photinus pyralis, which emits yellow-green (557 nm) light, is widely believed to be the most efficient bioluminescence system known, making this luciferase an excellent tool for monitoring gene expression. In a previous study designed to produce luciferases for simultaneously monitoring two gene expression events, we identified a very promising blue-shifted emitter (548 nm) that contained the mutations Val241Ile, Gly246Ala, and Phe250Ser [Branchini, B. R., Southworth, T. L., Khattak, N. F., Michelini, E., and Roda, A. (2005) Red- and green-emitting firefly luciferase mutants for bioluminescent reporter applications, Anal. Biochem. 345, 140-148]. To establish the basis of the unusual blue-shifted emission, we determined that a simple additive effect of the three individual mutations did not account for the spectral properties of the triple mutant. Instead, the bioluminescence emission spectra of two double mutants containing Phe250Ser and either Val241Ile or Gly246Ala very closely resembled that of the triple mutant. Additional mutagenesis results confirmed that the blue-shifted emission of the double mutants was determined by the synergistic behavior of active site residues. Molecular modeling studies of the Gly246Ala and Phe250Ser double mutant supported the notion that the blue-shifted emission was due to localized changes that increased the hydrophobicity at the emitter site as a result of the addition of a single methyl group at position 246. Moreover, the modeling data suggested that the Ala246 side chain remained close to the emitter through an additional H-bond between Ala246 and the hydroxyl group of Phe250, providing a possible structural basis for the synergistic behavior. 相似文献
6.
Tafreshi NKh Sadeghizadeh M Emamzadeh R Ranjbar B Naderi-Manesh H Hosseinkhani S 《The Biochemical journal》2008,415(1):27-33
Eukaryotic-type serine/threonine protein kinases in bacteria have been implicated in controlling a host of cellular activities. PknA is one of eleven such protein kinases from Mycobacterium tuberculosis which regulates morphological changes associated with cell division. In the present study we provide the evidence for the ability of PknA to transphosphorylate mMurD (mycobacterial UDP-N-acetylmuramoyl-L-alanine:D-glutamate-ligase), the enzyme involved in peptidoglycan biosynthesis. Its co-expression in Escherichia coli along with PknA resulted in phosphorylation of mMurD. Consistent with these observations, results of the solid-phase binding assays revealed a high-affinity in vitro binding between the two proteins. Furthermore, overexpression of m-murD in Mycobacterium smegmatis yielded a phosphorylated protein. The results of the present study therefore point towards the possibility of mMurD being a substrate of PknA. 相似文献
7.
The Limulus reaction is an application of the defense mechanism of horseshoe crab for endotoxin detection. Endotoxin is a component of the cell wall in the outer membrane of gram-negative bacteria, and causes fever or shock when it enters the human blood stream. For endotoxin detection, gel formation or turbidity of the coagulation factor chromogen or fluorescence-modified peptide is used. However, these conventional methods have problems with regard to their measurement time or sensitivity. We recently obtained a mutant firefly luciferase that has a luminescence intensity over 10-fold higher than that of the wild type. Therefore, we developed a new endotoxin detection method that combines the Limulus reaction and bioluminescence using mutant luciferase. The new method detects 0.0005 EU/ml of endotoxin within 15 min. 相似文献
8.
Increase in bioluminescence intensity of firefly luciferase using genetic modification 总被引:1,自引:1,他引:1
Firefly luciferase is widely used for enzymatic measurement of ATP, and its gene is used as a reporter for gene expression experiments. From our mutant library, we selected novel mutations in Photinus pyralis luciferase with higher luminescence intensity. These included mutations at Ile423, Asp436, and Leu530. Luciferase is structurally composed of a large N-terminal active site domain (residues 1-436), a flexible linker (residues 436-440) peptide, and a small C-terminal domain (residues 440-550) facing the N domain. Thus, the mutations are located at the junction of the N-terminal domain and the flexible linker, in the flexible linker peptide, and in the tip of the C-terminal domain, respectively. Substitution of Asp436 with a nonbulky amino acid such as Gly remarkably increased the substrate affinity for ATP and d-luciferin. Substitution of Ile423 with a hydrophobic amino acid such as Leu and that of Leu530 with a positively charged amino acid such as Arg increased the substrate affinity and the turnover rate. Combining these mutations, we obtained luciferases that generate more than 10-fold higher luminescence intensity than the wild-type enzyme. 相似文献
9.
Lipoic acid was found to inhibit the firefly luciferin-luciferase reaction. The inhibition is competitive and is the strongest known (Ki = 0.026 +/- 0.013 microM) compared with other reported inhibitors. Considering the structure-activity correlations, the mechanism of inhibition may originate from the sulfur atom and carboxyl moiety of lipoic acid giving it structural specificity. Subsequent addition of lipoic acid and nitric oxide accelerated the inhibition in vitro, suggesting that lipoic acid may have a functional role in regulating firefly bioluminescence. 相似文献
10.
Branchini BR Southworth TL Murtiashaw MH Magyar RA Gonzalez SA Ruggiero MC Stroh JG 《Biochemistry》2004,43(23):7255-7262
Beetle luciferases (including those of the firefly) use the same luciferin substrate to naturally display light ranging in color from green (lambda(max) approximately 530 nm) to red (lambda(max) approximately 635 nm). In a recent communication, we reported (Branchini, B. R., Murtiashaw, M. H., Magyar, R. A., Portier, N. C., Ruggiero, M. C., and Stroh, J. G. (2002) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 124, 2112-2113) that the synthetic adenylate of firefly luciferin analogue D-5,5-dimethylluciferin was transformed into the emitter 5,5-dimethyloxyluciferin in bioluminescence reactions catalyzed by luciferases from Photinus pyralis and the click beetle Pyrophorus plagiophthalamus. 5,5-Dimethyloxyluciferin is constrained to exist in the keto form and fluoresces mainly in the red. However, bioluminescence spectra revealed that green light emission was produced by the firefly enzyme, and red light was observed with the click beetle protein. These results, augmented with steady-state kinetic studies, were taken as experimental support for mechanisms of firefly bioluminescence color that require only a single keto form of oxyluciferin. We report here the results of mutagenesis studies designed to determine the basis of the observed differences in bioluminescence color with the analogue adenylate. Mutants of P. pyralis luciferase putative active site residues Gly246 and Phe250, as well as corresponding click beetle residues Ala243 and Ser247 were constructed and characterized using bioluminescence emission spectroscopy and steady state kinetics with adenylate substrates. Based on an analysis of these and recently reported (Branchini, B. R., Southworth, T. L., Murtiashaw, M. H., Boije, H., and Fleet, S. E. (2003) Biochemistry 42, 10429-10436) data, we have developed an alternative mechanism of bioluminescence color. The basis of the mechanism is that luciferase modulates emission color by controlling the resonance-based charge delocalization of the anionic keto form of the oxyluciferin excited state. 相似文献
11.
12.
Tafreshi NKh Hosseinkhani S Sadeghizadeh M Sadeghi M Ranjbar B Naderi-Manesh H 《The Journal of biological chemistry》2007,282(12):8641-8647
The firefly bioluminescence reaction, which uses luciferin, Mg-ATP, and molecular oxygen to yield an electronically excited oxyluciferin, is carried out by luciferase and visible light is emitted. The bioluminescence color of firefly luciferases is determined by the luciferase structure and assay conditions. Among different beetle luciferases, those from Phrixothrix railroad worm emit either yellow or red bioluminescence colors. Sequence alignment analysis shows that the red-emitter luciferase from Phrixothrix hirtus has an additional Arg residue at 353, which is absent in firefly luciferases. We report here the construction and purification of a mutant at residue Arg(356), which is not conserved in beetle luciferases. By insertion of an additional residue (Arg(356)) using site-specific insertion mutagenesis in a green-emitter luciferase (Lampyris turkestanicus) the color of emitted light was changed to red and the optimum temperature of activity was also increased. Insertion of this Arg in an important flexible loop showed changes of the bioluminescence color and the luciferase reaction took place with relatively retention of its basic kinetic properties such as Km and relative activity. Comparison of native and mutant luciferases using homology modeling reveals a significant conformational change of the flexible loop in the red mutant. Movement of flexible loop brought about a new ionic interaction concomitant with a change in polarity of the emitter site, thereby leading to red emission. It is worthwhile to note that the increased optimum temperature and emission of red light might make mutant luciferase a suitable reporter for the study of gene expression and bioluminescence imaging. 相似文献
13.
Takayuki Minekawa Hiroshi Ohkuma Katsushi Abe Hiroaki Maekawa Hidetoshi Arakawa 《Luminescence》2011,26(3):167-171
Firefly luciferin–luciferase bioluminescence is known for its high quantum yield (41.0 ± 7.4%). Given this high quantum yield, application of this bioluminescence is expected to be useful in the field of clinical diagnostics. The kinetic profile of this bioluminescence exhibits an instant rise (<1 s) and a rapid decay in light emission (decreased to 42% after 5 s). In this study, we applied four enhancers including coenzyme A, inosine5′‐triphosphate sodium salt, sodium tripolyphosphate and potassium pyrophosphate to prolong light emission. When these enhancers were used, luminescence was only decreased to 89, 83, 87 and 82% after 5 s, respectively. These materials modified the kinetic profile of bioluminescence so that the luminescence is more suitable for clinical application. It becomes more suitable because they enable highly sensitive integration and simplification of a device by separating luminescence measurements from dispensing of reagents. Using these enhancers, we then developed a bioluminescent enzyme immunoassay (BLEIA) for hepatitis B virus surface antigen (HBsAg) that employed firefly luciferase as a labeling enzyme. We compared the results obtained from the HBsAg BLEIA method with the conventional chemiluminescent enzyme immunoassay method, and found a satisfactory correlation (r = 0.984, n = 118). Copyright © 2010 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. 相似文献
14.
Temperature-dependent effects of high pressure on the bioluminescence of firefly luciferase. 下载免费PDF全文
This study measured the effect of high pressure on the enzyme kinetics of firefly luciferase. When firefly luciferase is mixed with luciferin and ATP, a transient flash of light is produced, followed by a weak light, lasting hours. The first stage reaction produces an enzyme-luciferin-AMP complex and pyrophosphate. Addition of pyrophosphate to the reaction mixture decelerated the reaction rate, and the initial flash was prolonged to a plateau, showing a quasi-equilibrium state. The effects of temperature and pressure were analyzed at the plateau. The temperature scan showed that the maximum light intensity was observed at about 22.5 degrees C. When pressurized below the temperature optimum, pressure decreased the light intensity, while increasing it above the temperature optimum. According to the theory of absolute reaction rate, the following values were obtained for the bioluminescent reaction: delta V++ = 823.7 - 2.8 T cm3/mol and delta V = -280.47 + 0.94T cm3/mol, where T is the absolute temperature, delta V++ and delta V are, respectively, activation volume and the volume change due to thermal unfolding. The optimal temperature for the maximum light output occurs because the reaction rate increases with the temperature elevation at low temperature range, but the thermal unfolding of the enzyme decelerates the reaction velocity when the temperature exceeds a critical value. The intensity of luminescence is modified by the influence of pressure on both delta V++ and delta V. So long as the volume of the activated complex (V++) exceeds the average volume of the nonactivated complex (VN), pressure will slow down the reaction. At the point where the volumes become equal, there is no change in the rate under pressure. When the volume of the activated complex is less than that of the reactants, pressure will speed up the rate. This study showed that firefly luciferase is not exceptional to other enzymes in responding to high pressure. 相似文献
15.
Firefly luciferase catalyzes the highly efficient emission of yellow-green light from the substrates luciferin, Mg-ATP, and oxygen in a two-step process. The enzyme first catalyzes the adenylation of the carboxylate substrate luciferin with Mg-ATP followed by the oxidation of the acyl-adenylate to the light-emitting oxyluciferin product. The beetle luciferases are members of a large family of nonbioluminescent proteins that catalyze reactions of ATP with carboxylate substrates to form acyl-adenylates. Formation of the luciferase-luciferyl-AMP complex is a specific example of the chemistry common to this enzyme family. Site-directed mutants at positions Lys529, Thr343, and His245 were studied to determine the effects of the amino acid changes at these positions on the individual luciferase-catalyzed adenylation and oxidation reactions. The results suggest that Lys529 is a critical residue for effective substrate orientation and that it provides favorable polar interactions important for transition state stabilization leading to efficient adenylate production. These findings as well as those with the Thr343 and His245 mutants are interpreted in the context of the firefly luciferase X-ray structures and computational-based models of the active site. 相似文献
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17.
Yulia Modestova Mikhail I. KoksharovNatalia N. Ugarova 《Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Proteins and Proteomics》2014,1844(9):1463-1471
Firefly luciferase is a two-domain enzyme that catalyzes the bioluminescent reaction of firefly luciferin oxidation. Color of the emitted light depends on the structure of the enzyme, yet the exact color-tuning mechanism remains unknown by now, and the role of the C-domain in it is rarely discussed, because a very few color-shifting mutations in the C-domain were described. Recently we reported a strong red-shifting mutation E457K in the C-domain; the bioluminescence spectra of this enzyme were independent of temperature or pH. In the present study we investigated the role of the residue E457 in the enzyme using the Luciola mingrelica luciferase with a thermostabilized N-domain as a parent enzyme for site-directed mutagenesis. We obtained a set of mutants and studied their catalytic properties, thermal stability and bioluminescence spectra. Experimental spectra were represented as a sum of two components (bioluminescence spectra of putative “red” and “green” emitters); λmax of these components were constant for all the mutants, but the ratio of these emitters was defined by temperature and mutations in the C-domain. We suggest that each emitter is stabilized by a specific conformation of the active site; thus, enzymes with two forms of the active site coexist in the reactive media. The rigid structure of the C-domain is crucial for maintaining the conformation corresponding to the “green” emitter. We presume that the emitters are the keto- and enol forms of oxyluciferin. 相似文献
18.
Chemical modification of carboxypeptidase Ag1 from goat pancreas with phenylglyoxal or ninhydrin led to a loss of enzymatic activity. The inactivation by phenylglyoxal in 200 mM N-ethylmorpholine, 200 mM sodium chloride buffer, pH 8.0, or in 300 mM borate buffer, pH 8.0, followed pseudo-first-order kinetics at all concentrations of the modifier. The reaction order with respect to phenylglyoxal was 1.68 and 0.81 in 200 mM N-ethylmorpholine, 200 mM NaCl buffer and 300 mM borate buffer, pH 8.0, respectively, indicating modification of single arginine residue per mole of enzyme. The kinetic data were supported by amino acid analysis of modified enzyme, which also showed the modification of single arginine residue per mole of the enzyme. The modified enzyme had an absorption maximum at 250 nm, and quantification of the increase in absorbance showed modification of single arginine residue. Modification of arginine residue was protected by beta-phenylpropionic acid, thus suggesting involvement of an arginine residue at or near the active site of the enzyme. 相似文献
19.