Abstract

Yellow mutants of the green fluorescent protein (YFP) are crucial constituents of genetically encoded indicators of signal transduction and fusions to monitor protein-protein interactions. However, previous YFPs show excessive pH sensitivity, chloride interference, poor photostability, or poor expression at 37 degrees C. Protein evolution in Escherichia coli has produced a new YFP named Citrine, in which the mutation Q69M confers a much lower pK(a) (5.7) than for previous YFPs, indifference to chloride, twice the photostability of previous YFPs, and much better expression at 37 degrees C and in organelles. The halide resistance is explained by a 2.2-A x-ray crystal structure of Citrine, showing that the methionine side chain fills what was once a large halide-binding cavity adjacent to the chromophore. Insertion of calmodulin within Citrine or fusion of cyan fluorescent protein, calmodulin, a calmodulin-binding peptide and Citrine has generated improved calcium indicators. These chimeras can be targeted to multiple cellular locations and have permitted the first single-cell imaging of free [Ca(2+)] in the Golgi. Citrine is superior to all previous YFPs except when pH or halide sensitivity is desired and is particularly advantageous within genetically encoded fluorescent indicators of physiological signals.

Keywords

FluorescenceSensitivity (control systems)ChemistryFluorescent proteinGreen fluorescent proteinBiochemistryPhysicsEngineering

Affiliated Institutions

Related Publications

Publication Info

Year
2001
Type
article
Volume
276
Issue
31
Pages
29188-29194
Citations
1030
Access
Closed

External Links

Social Impact

Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions

Citation Metrics

1030
OpenAlex

Cite This

Oliver Griesbeck, Geoffrey S. Baird, Robert E. Campbell et al. (2001). Reducing the Environmental Sensitivity of Yellow Fluorescent Protein. Journal of Biological Chemistry , 276 (31) , 29188-29194. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m102815200

Identifiers

DOI
10.1074/jbc.m102815200