Development of a protease activity assay using heat-sensitive Tus-GFP fusion protein substrates.

Anal Biochem

Comparative Genomics Centre, School of Pharmacy and Molecular Sciences, James Cook University, DB 21, James Cook Drive, Townsville, QLD 4811, Australia.

Published: August 2011

Proteases are implicated in various diseases and several have been identified as potential drug targets or biomarkers. As a result, protease activity assays that can be performed in high throughput are essential for the screening of inhibitors in drug discovery programs. Here we describe the development of a simple, general method for the characterization of protease activity and its use for inhibitor screening. GFP was genetically fused to a comparatively unstable Tus protein through an interdomain linker containing a specially designed protease site, which can be proteolyzed. When this Tus-GFP fusion protein substrate is proteolyzed it releases GFP, which remains in solution after a short heat denaturation and centrifugation step used to eliminate uncleaved Tus-GFP. Thus, the increase in GFP fluorescence is directly proportional to protease activity. We validated the protease activity assay with three different proteases, i.e., trypsin, caspase 3, and neutrophil elastase, and demonstrated that it can be used to determine protease activity and the effect of inhibitors with small sample volumes in just a few simple steps using a fluorescence plate reader.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ab.2011.04.028DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

protease activity
24
activity assay
8
tus-gfp fusion
8
fusion protein
8
activity
6
protease
6
development protease
4
assay heat-sensitive
4
heat-sensitive tus-gfp
4
protein substrates
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!