4.6 Article

It's cheap to be colorful - Anthozoans show a slow turnover of GFP-like proteins

期刊

FEBS JOURNAL
卷 274, 期 10, 页码 2496-2505

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1742-4658.2007.05785.x

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coral pigments; green fluorescent protein; photoconversion; protein half-life; protein metabolism

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Pigments homologous to the green fluorescent protein (GFP) contribute up to similar to 14% of the soluble protein content of many anthozoans. Maintenance of such high tissue levels poses a severe energetic penalty to the animals if protein turnover is fast. To address this as yet unexplored issue, we established that the irreversible green-to-red conversion of the GFP-like pigments from the reef corals Montastrea cavernosa (mcavRFP) and Lobophyllia hemprichii (EosFP) is driven by violet-blue radiation in vivo and in situ. In the absence of photoconverting light, we subsequently tracked degradation of the red-converted forms of the two proteins in coral tissue using in vivo spectroscopy and immunochemical detection of the post-translational peptide backbone modification. The pigments displayed surprisingly slow decay rates, characterized by half-lives of similar to 20 days. The slow turnover of GFP-like proteins implies that the associated energetic costs for being colorful are comparatively low. Moreover, high in vivo stability makes GFP-like proteins suitable for functions requiring high pigment concentrations, such as photoprotection.

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