Bioluminescence detection of proteolytic bond cleavage by using recombinant aequorin

被引:21
作者
Deo, SK [1 ]
Lewis, JD [1 ]
Daunert, S [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Kentucky, Dept Chem, Lexington, KY 40506 USA
关键词
aequorin; HIV-1; protease; bioluminescence; protease inhibitors; bond cleavage assay;
D O I
10.1006/abio.2000.4539
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Detection of proteolytic bond cleavage was achieved by taking advantage of the bioluminescence emission generated by the photoprotein aequorin. A genetically engineered HIV-1 protease substrate was coupled with a cysteine-free mutant of aequorin by employing the polymerase chain reaction to produce a fusion protein that incorporates an optimum natural protease cleavage site. The fusion protein was immobilized on a solid phase and employed as the substrate for the HIV-1 protease. Proteolytic bond cleavage was detected by a decrease in the bioluminescence generated by the aequorin fusion protein on the solid phase. A dose-response curve for HIV-1 protease was constructed by relating the decrease in bioluminescence signal with varying amounts of the protease. The system was also used to evaluate two competitive and one noncompetitive inhibitor of the HIV-1 protease. Among the advantages of this assay is that by using recombinant methods a complete bioluminescently labeled protease recognition site can be designed and produced. The assay yields very sensitive detection limits, which are inherent to bioluminescence-based methods. An application of this system may be in the high-throughput screening of biopharmaceutical drugs that are potential inhibitors of a target protease. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
引用
收藏
页码:87 / 94
页数:8
相关论文
共 27 条
[1]   Natural variation in HIV-1 protease, gag p7 and p6, and protease cleavage sites within Gag/Pol polyproteins: Amino acid substitutions in the absence of protease inhibitors in mothers and children infected by human immunodeficiency virus type 1 [J].
Barrie, KA ;
Perez, E ;
Lamers, SL ;
Farmerie, WG ;
Dunn, BM ;
Sleasman, JW ;
Goodenow, MM .
VIROLOGY, 1996, 219 (02) :407-416
[2]  
BILLICH S, 1988, J BIOL CHEM, V263, P17905
[3]   Screening of inhibitors of HIV-1 protease using an Escherichia coli cell assay [J].
Buttner, J ;
Dornmair, K ;
Schramm, HJ .
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 1997, 233 (01) :36-38
[4]   Detecting biomolecules in picoliter vials using aequorin bioluminescence [J].
Crofcheck, CL ;
Grosvenor, AL ;
Anderson, KW ;
Lumpp, JK ;
Scott, DL ;
Daunert, S .
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1997, 69 (23) :4768-4772
[5]   HIV-1 PROTEASE SPECIFICITY OF PEPTIDE CLEAVAGE IS SUFFICIENT FOR PROCESSING OF GAG AND POL POLYPROTEINS [J].
DARKE, PL ;
NUTT, RF ;
BRADY, SF ;
GARSKY, VM ;
CICCARONE, TM ;
LEU, CT ;
LUMMA, PK ;
FREIDINGER, RM ;
VEBER, DF ;
SIGAL, IS .
BIOCHEMICAL AND BIOPHYSICAL RESEARCH COMMUNICATIONS, 1988, 156 (01) :297-303
[6]   Development and standardisation of an immuno-quantified solid phase assay for HIV-1 aspartyl protease activity and its application to the evaluation of inhibitors [J].
Fournout, S ;
Roquet, F ;
Salhi, SL ;
Seyer, R ;
Valverde, V ;
Masson, JM ;
Jouin, P ;
Pau, B ;
Nicolas, M ;
Hanin, V .
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1997, 69 (09) :1746-1752
[7]   Bioluminescence hybridization assays using recombinant aequorin. Application to the detection of prostate-specific antigen mRNA [J].
Galvan, B ;
Christopoulos, TK .
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1996, 68 (20) :3545-3550
[8]   Connexin-aequorin chimerae report cytoplasmic calcium environments along trafficking pathways leading to gap junction biogenesis in living COS-7 cells [J].
George, CH ;
Kendall, JM ;
Campbell, AK ;
Evans, WH .
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 1998, 273 (45) :29822-29829
[9]  
HORTON RM, 1990, BIOTECHNIQUES, V8, P528
[10]   Improving the activity of immobilized subtilisin by site-specific attachment to surfaces [J].
Huang, W ;
Wang, JQ ;
Bhattacharyya, D ;
Bachas, LG .
ANALYTICAL CHEMISTRY, 1997, 69 (22) :4601-4607