Artículos de revistas
Evaluation of GFP Tag as a Screening Reporter in Directed Evolution of a Hyperthermophilic beta-Glucosidase
Fecha
2009Registro en:
MOLECULAR BIOTECHNOLOGY, v.42, n.2, p.205-215, 2009
1073-6085
10.1007/s12033-009-9152-1
Autor
LIMA, Andre O. S.
DAVIS, Diane F.
SWIATEK, Gavin
MCCARTHY, James K.
YERNOOL, Dinesh
PIZZIRANI-KLEINER, Aline A.
EVELEIGH, Douglas E.
Institución
Resumen
By applying a directed evolution methodology specific enzymatic characteristics can be enhanced, but to select mutants of interest from a large mutant bank, this approach requires high throughput screening and facile selection. To facilitate such primary screening of enhanced clones, an expression system was tested that uses a green fluorescent protein (GFP) tag from Aequorea victoria linked to the enzyme of interest. As GFP`s fluorescence is readily measured, and as there is a 1:1 molar correlation between the target protein and GFP, the concept proposed was to determine whether GFP could facilitate primary screening of error-prone PCR (EPP) clones. For this purpose a thermostable beta-glucosidase (BglA) from Fervidobacterium sp. was used as a model enzyme. A vector expressing the chimeric protein BglA-GFP-6XHis was constructed and the fusion protein purified and characterized. When compared to the native proteins, the components of the fusion displayed modified characteristics, such as enhanced GFP thermostability and a higher BglA optimum temperature. Clones carrying mutant BglA proteins obtained by EPP, were screened based on the BglA/GFP activity ratio. Purified tagged enzymes from selected clones resulted in modified substrate specificity.