Mispacking and the Fitness Landscape of the Green
Fluorescent Protein Chromophore Milieu
Posted on 2017-01-11 - 00:00
The
autocatalytic
maturation of the chromophore in green fluorescent protein (GFP)
was thought to require the precise positioning of the side chains
surrounding it in the core of the protein, many of which are strongly
conserved among homologous fluorescent proteins. In this study, we
screened for green fluorescence in an exhaustive set of point mutations
of seven residues that make up the chromophore microenvironment, excluding
R96 and E222 because mutations at these positions have been previously
characterized. Contrary to expectations, nearly all amino acids were
tolerated at all seven positions. Only four point mutations knocked
out fluorescence entirely. However, chromophore maturation was found
to be slower and/or fluorescence reduced in several cases. Selected
combinations of mutations showed nonadditive effects, including cooperativity
and rescue. The results provide
guidelines for the computational engineering of GFPs.
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Banerjee, Shounak; Schenkelberg, Christian D.; Jordan, Thomas B.; Reimertz, Julia M.; Crone, Emily E.; Crone, Donna E.; et al. (2017). Mispacking and the Fitness Landscape of the Green
Fluorescent Protein Chromophore Milieu. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.biochem.6b00800