Design of thermostable luciferases through arginine saturation in solvent-exposed loops

45Citations
Citations of this article
34Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

In most bioluminescence systems the oxidation of luciferin and production of light is catalyzed by luciferases. Protein engineering studies have shown that thermostable proteins from thermophilic organisms have a higher frequency of Arg, especially in exposed states. To further clarify the arginine saturation effect on thermostability of firefly luciferase, some of hydrophobic solvent-exposed residues in Lampyris turkestanicus luciferase are changed to arginine. All of these residues are located at the surface loops of L.turkestanicus luciferase. Starting with a luciferase mutant (E 354Q/Arg 356), single mutation (-Q 35R, -I 182R, -I 232R and -L 300R), double mutation (-Q 35R/I 232R) and triple mutation (-Q 35R/I 232R/I 182R) are added. Bioluminescence emission spectra indicate that substitution of Arg by these residues, do not effect on the maximum wavelength of emission spectrum. It should be noted, introduction of double mutation (-Q 35R/I 232R) and triple mutation (-Q 35R/I 232R/I 182R) were kept specific activity of firefly luciferase. By addition of positively charged residue, some specific mutations (-I 232R, -Q 35R/I 232R and -Q 35R/I 232R/I 182R) showed that optimum temperature of activity was increased to 40°C which are 12 and 15°C higher than E 354Q/Arg 356 and wild-type luciferases, respectively. Also, after 40 min incubation of enzymes at 40°C, the relative remaining activity of wild type was only 5, whereas for -I 232R, -Q 35R/I 232R and -Q 35R/I 232R/I 182R was 60, 80 and 80 of original activity, respectively. © The Author 2011.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Mortazavi, M., & Hosseinkhani, S. (2011). Design of thermostable luciferases through arginine saturation in solvent-exposed loops. Protein Engineering, Design and Selection, 24(12), 893–903. https://doi.org/10.1093/protein/gzr051

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free