Abstract

The green-fluorescent protein (GFP) that functions as a bioluminescence energy transfer acceptor in the jellyfish Aequorea has been renatured with up to 90% yield following acid, base, or guanidine denaturation. Renaturation, following pH neutralization or simple dilution of guanidine, proceeds with a half-recovery time of less than 5 min as measured by the return of visible fluorescence. Residual unrenatured protein has been quantitatively removed by chromatography on Sephadex G-75. The chromatographed, renatured GFP has corrected fluorescence excitation and emission spectra identical with those of the native protein at pH 7.0 (excitation lambda max = 398 nm; emission lambda max = 508 nm) and also at pH 12.2 (excitation lambda max = 476 nm; emission lambda max = 505 nm). With its peak position red-shifted 78 nm at pH 12.2, the Aequorea GFP excitation spectrum more closely resembles the excitation spectra of Renilla (sea pansy) and Phialidium (hydromedusan) GFPs at neutral pH. Visible absorption spectra of the native and renatured Aequorea green-fluorescent proteins at pH 7.0 are also identical, suggesting that the chromophore binding site has returned to its native state. Small differences in far-UV absorption and circular dichroism spectra, however, indicate that the renatured protein has not fully regained its native secondary structure.

Keywords

Aequorea victoriaFluorescenceDenaturation (fissile materials)Green fluorescent proteinCircular dichroismChemistryChromophoreGuanidineFluorescence spectroscopyAnalytical Chemistry (journal)ChromatographyCrystallographyPhotochemistryBiochemistryNuclear chemistry

MeSH Terms

AequorinAnimalsCircular DichroismCnidariaGuanidineGuanidinesHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationLuminescent ProteinsProtein ConformationProtein DenaturationScyphozoaSpectrometryFluorescenceSpectrophotometry

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Publication Info

Year
1982
Type
article
Volume
21
Issue
19
Pages
4535-4540
Citations
339
Access
Closed

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Cite This

William W. Ward, Stephen H. Bokman (1982). Reversible denaturation of Aequorea green-fluorescent protein: physical separation and characterization of the renatured protein. Biochemistry , 21 (19) , 4535-4540. https://doi.org/10.1021/bi00262a003

Identifiers

DOI
10.1021/bi00262a003
PMID
6128025

Data Quality

Data completeness: 81%