Attenuation of green fluorescent protein half-life in mammalian cells

P Corish, C Tyler-Smith - Protein engineering, 1999 - academic.oup.com
P Corish, C Tyler-Smith
Protein engineering, 1999academic.oup.com
The half-life of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) was determined biochemically in cultured
mouse LA-9 cells. The wild-type protein was found to be stable with a half-life of~ 26 h, but
could be destabilized by the addition of putative proteolytic signal sequences derived from
proteins with shorter half-lives. A C-terminal fusion of a PEST sequence from the mouse
ornithine decarboxylase gene reduced the half-life to 9.8 h, resulting in a GFP variant
suitable for the study of dynamic cellular processes. In an N-terminal fusion containing the …
Abstract
The half-life of the green fluorescent protein (GFP) was determined biochemically in cultured mouse LA-9 cells. The wild-type protein was found to be stable with a half-life of ~26 h, but could be destabilized by the addition of putative proteolytic signal sequences derived from proteins with shorter half-lives. A C-terminal fusion of a PEST sequence from the mouse ornithine decarboxylase gene reduced the half-life to 9.8 h, resulting in a GFP variant suitable for the study of dynamic cellular processes. In an N-terminal fusion containing the mouse cyclin B1 destruction box, it was reduced to 5.8 h, with most degradation taking place at metaphase. The combination of both sequences produced a similar GFP half-life of 5.5 h. Thus, the stability of this marker protein can be controlled in predetermined ways by addition of the appropriate proteolytic signals.
Oxford University Press