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Efficient production of fluorophore-labeled CC chemokines for biophysical studies using recombinant enterokinase and recombinant sortase
Authors:Wenyan Guan  Ning Zhang  Arjan Bains  Mourad Sadqi  Cynthia M. Dupureur  Patricia J. LiWang
Affiliation:1. Materials and Biomaterials Science and Engineering, University of California Merced, Merced, California, USA;2. Qingdao Institute of Bioenergy and Bioprocess Technology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Qingdao, China;3. Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Merced, Merced, California, USA;4. Bioengineering, CREST Center for Cellular and Biomolecular Machines, University of California Merced, Merced, California, USA;5. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Missouri St. Louis, St. Louis, Missouri, USA;6. Molecular Cell Biology, Health Sciences Research Institute, University of California Merced, Merced, California, USA
Abstract:Chemokines are important immune system proteins, many of which mediate inflammation due to their function to activate and cause chemotaxis of leukocytes. An important anti-inflammatory strategy is therefore to bind and inhibit chemokines, which leads to the need for biophysical studies of chemokines as they bind various possible partners. Because a successful anti-chemokine drug should bind at low concentrations, techniques such as fluorescence anisotropy that can provide nanomolar signal detection are required. To allow fluorescence experiments to be carried out on chemokines, a method is described for the production of fluorescently labeled chemokines. First, a fusion-tagged chemokine is produced in Escherichia coli, then efficient cleavage of the N-terminal fusion partner is carried out with lab-produced enterokinase, followed by covalent modification with a fluorophore, mediated by the lab-produced sortase enzyme. This overall process reduces the need for expensive commercial enzymatic reagents. Finally, we utilize the product, vMIP-fluor, in binding studies with the chemokine binding protein vCCI, which has great potential as an anti-inflammatory therapeutic, showing a binding constant for vCCI:vMIP-fluor of 0.37 ± 0.006 nM. We also show how a single modified chemokine homolog (vMIP-fluor) can be used in competition assays with other chemokines and we report a Kd for vCCI:CCL17 of 14 μM. This work demonstrates an efficient method of production and fluorescent labeling of chemokines for study across a broad range of concentrations.
Keywords:chemokines  enterokinase  fluorescence anisotropy  sortase  vCCI
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