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Monomerization of the photoconvertible fluorescent protein SAASoti by rational mutagenesis of single amino acids.

Ilya D SolovyevAlexandra V GavshinaAditya S KattiAlexey I ChizhikLeonid M VinokurovGrigory D LapshinTatiana V IvashinaMaria G KhrenovaIgor I KireevIngo GregorJörg EnderleinAlexander P Savitsky
Published in: Scientific reports (2018)
Photoconvertible fluorescent proteins (PCFPs) are widely used as markers for the visualization of intracellular processes and for sub-diffraction single-molecule localization microscopy. Although wild type of a new photoconvertible fluorescent protein SAASoti tends to aggregate, we succeeded, via rational mutagenesis, to obtain variants that formed either tetramers or monomers. We compare two approaches: one is based on the structural similarity between SAASoti and Kaede, which helped us to identify a single point mutation (V127T) at the protein's hydrophobic interface that leads to monomerization. The other is based on a chemical modification of amino groups of SAASoti with succinic anhydride, which converts the protein aggregates into monomers. Mass-spectrometric analysis helped us to identify that the modification of a single ε-amino group of lysine K145 in the strongly charged interface AB was sufficient to convert the protein into its tetrameric form. Furthermore, site-directed mutagenesis was used to generate mutants that proved to be either monomeric or tetrameric, both capable of rapid green-to-red photoconversion. This allows SAASoti to be used as a photoconvertible fluorescent marker for in vivo cell studies.
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