Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm

The bacterial periplasm is of special interest whenever cell factories are designed and engineered. Recombinantely produced proteins are targeted to the periplasmic space of Gram negative bacteria to take advantage of the authentic N-termini, disulfide bridge formation and easy accessibility for pur...

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Main Authors: Thorben Dammeyer, Philip Tinnefeld
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2012-10-01
Series:Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210013
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spelling doaj-7d9b64f91709446ab4c8b77880990c002020-11-24T21:16:48ZengElsevierComputational and Structural Biotechnology Journal2001-03702012-10-0134e201210013Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasmThorben DammeyerPhilip TinnefeldThe bacterial periplasm is of special interest whenever cell factories are designed and engineered. Recombinantely produced proteins are targeted to the periplasmic space of Gram negative bacteria to take advantage of the authentic N-termini, disulfide bridge formation and easy accessibility for purification with less contaminating cellular proteins. The oxidizing environment of the periplasm promotes disulfide bridge formation - a prerequisite for proper folding of many proteins into their active conformation. In contrast, the most popular reporter protein in all of cell biology, Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), remains inactive if translocated to the periplasmic space prior to folding. Here, the self-catalyzed chromophore maturation is blocked by formation of covalent oligomers via interchain disulfide bonds in the oxidizing environment. However, different protein engineering approaches addressing folding and stability of GFP resulted in improved proteins with enhanced folding properties. Recent studies describe GFP variants that are not only active if translocated in their folded form via the twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway, but actively fold in the periplasm following general secretory pathway (Sec) and signal recognition particle (SRP) mediated secretion. This mini-review highlights the progress that enables new insights into bacterial export and periplasmic protein organization, as well as new biotechnological applications combining the advantages of the periplasmic production and the Aequorea-based fluorescent reporter proteins.http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210013bacterial exportfluorescent proteinsprotein foldingchromophore maturationsfGFPperiplasm
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thorben Dammeyer
Philip Tinnefeld
spellingShingle Thorben Dammeyer
Philip Tinnefeld
Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
bacterial export
fluorescent proteins
protein folding
chromophore maturation
sfGFP
periplasm
author_facet Thorben Dammeyer
Philip Tinnefeld
author_sort Thorben Dammeyer
title Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
title_short Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
title_full Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
title_fullStr Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
title_full_unstemmed Engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
title_sort engineered fluorescent proteins illuminate the bacterial periplasm
publisher Elsevier
series Computational and Structural Biotechnology Journal
issn 2001-0370
publishDate 2012-10-01
description The bacterial periplasm is of special interest whenever cell factories are designed and engineered. Recombinantely produced proteins are targeted to the periplasmic space of Gram negative bacteria to take advantage of the authentic N-termini, disulfide bridge formation and easy accessibility for purification with less contaminating cellular proteins. The oxidizing environment of the periplasm promotes disulfide bridge formation - a prerequisite for proper folding of many proteins into their active conformation. In contrast, the most popular reporter protein in all of cell biology, Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP), remains inactive if translocated to the periplasmic space prior to folding. Here, the self-catalyzed chromophore maturation is blocked by formation of covalent oligomers via interchain disulfide bonds in the oxidizing environment. However, different protein engineering approaches addressing folding and stability of GFP resulted in improved proteins with enhanced folding properties. Recent studies describe GFP variants that are not only active if translocated in their folded form via the twin-arginine translocation (Tat) pathway, but actively fold in the periplasm following general secretory pathway (Sec) and signal recognition particle (SRP) mediated secretion. This mini-review highlights the progress that enables new insights into bacterial export and periplasmic protein organization, as well as new biotechnological applications combining the advantages of the periplasmic production and the Aequorea-based fluorescent reporter proteins.
topic bacterial export
fluorescent proteins
protein folding
chromophore maturation
sfGFP
periplasm
url http://journals.sfu.ca/rncsb/index.php/csbj/article/view/csbj.201210013
work_keys_str_mv AT thorbendammeyer engineeredfluorescentproteinsilluminatethebacterialperiplasm
AT philiptinnefeld engineeredfluorescentproteinsilluminatethebacterialperiplasm
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