4.8 Article

A far-red fluorescent protein evolved from a cyanobacterial phycobiliprotein

Journal

NATURE METHODS
Volume 13, Issue 9, Pages 763-769

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/NMETH.3935

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Funding

  1. National Institute of General Medical Sciences [F32GM089114]
  2. US National Institutes of Health [GM086197, NS027177, NS090590]
  3. Howard Hughes Medical Institute

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Far-red fluorescent proteins (FPs) are desirable for in vivo imaging because with these molecules less light is scattered, absorbed, or re-emitted by endogenous biomolecules compared with cyan, green, yellow, and orange FPs. We developed a new class of FP from an allophycocyanin a-subunit (APC alpha). Native APC requires a lyase to incorporate phycocyanobilin. The evolved FP, which we named small ultra-red FP (smURFP), covalently attaches a biliverdin (BV) chromophore without a lyase, and has 642/670-nm excitation-emission peaks, a large extinction coefficient (180,000 M(-1)cm(-1)) and quantum yield (18%), and photostability comparable to that of eGFP. smURFP has significantly greater BV incorporation rate and protein stability than the bacteriophytochrome (BPH) FPs. Moreover, BV supply is limited by membrane permeability, and smURFPs (but not BPH FPs) can incorporate a more membrane-permeant BV analog, making smURFP fluorescence comparable to that of FPs from jellyfish or coral. A far-red and near-infrared fluorescent cell cycle indicator was created with smURFP and a BPH FP.

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