A novel fluorescence assay for measuring phosphatidylserine decarboxylase catalysis

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Abstract

Phosphatidylserine decarboxylases (PSDs) are central enzymes in phospholipid metabolism that produce phosphatidylethanolamine (PE) in bacteria, protists, plants, and animals. We developed a fluorescence-based assay for selectively monitoring production of PE in reactions using a maltose-binding protein fusion with Plasmodium knowlesi PSD (MBP-His6-34PkPSD) as the enzyme. The PE detection by fluorescence (ex 403 nm, em 508 nm) occurred after the lipid reacted with a water-soluble distyrylbenzene-bis-aldehyde (DSB-3), and provided strong discrimination against the phosphatidylserine substrate. The reaction conditions were optimized for enzyme, substrate, product, and DSB-3 concentrations with the purified enzyme and also tested with crude extracts and membrane fractions from bacteria and yeast. The assay is readily amenable to application in 96- and 384-well microtiter plates and should prove useful for high-throughput screening for inhibitors of PSD enzymes across diverse phyla.

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Choi, J. Y., Surovtseva, Y. V., Van Sickle, S. M., Kumpf, J., Bunz, U. H. F., Mamoun, C. B., & Voelker, D. R. (2018). A novel fluorescence assay for measuring phosphatidylserine decarboxylase catalysis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 293(5), 1493–1503. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.RA117.000525

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