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Mechanically Assisted Bioluminescence with Natural Luciferase.

Stefan SchrammMarieh B Al-HandawiDurga Prasad KarothuAnastasiya KurlevskayaPatrick ComminsYasuo MitaniChun WuYoshihiro OhmiyaPanče Naumov
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
Mechanochemical analogues have recently been established for several enzymatic reactions, but they require periodic interruption of the reaction for sampling, dissolution, and (bio)chemical analysis to monitor their progress. By applying a mechanochemical procedure to induce bioluminescence analogous to that used by the marine ostracod Cypridina (Vargula) hilgendorfii, here we demonstrate that the light emitted by a bioluminescent reaction can be used to directly monitor the progress of a mechanoenzymatic reaction without sampling. Mechanical treatment of Cypridina luciferase with luciferin generates bright blue light which can be readily detected and analyzed spectroscopically. This mechanically assisted bioluminescence proceeds through a mechanism identical to that of bioluminescence in solution, but has higher activation energy due to being diffusion-controlled in the viscous matrix. The results suggest that luciferases could be used as light-emissive reporters of mechanoenzymatic reactions.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • molecular docking
  • quantum dots
  • combination therapy