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Structural Insight into the Photochemistry of Split Green Fluorescent Proteins: A Unique Role for a His-Tag. | LitMetric

Structural Insight into the Photochemistry of Split Green Fluorescent Proteins: A Unique Role for a His-Tag.

J Am Chem Soc

Department of Chemistry, Stanford University, Stanford, California 94305-5012, United States.

Published: January 2018

AI Article Synopsis

  • His-tags are used to purify proteins through metal affinity chromatography and are believed to have minimal effects on protein properties due to their small size.
  • Researchers discovered that certain His-tags in truncated green fluorescent proteins (GFPs) alter the proteins' behavior in light by acting as a substitute for a missing β-strand, providing unexpected stability.
  • This finding opens up possibilities for designing non-native sequences that enhance strand binding and photodissociation, which could be applied in optogenetics.

Article Abstract

Oligohistidine affinity tags (His-tags) are commonly fused to proteins to aid in their purification via metal affinity chromatography. These His-tags are generally assumed to have minimal impact on the properties of the fusion protein, as they have no propensity to form ordered elements, and are small enough not to significantly affect the solubility or size. Here we report structures of two variants of truncated green fluorescent protein (GFP), i.e., split GFP with a β-strand removed, that were found to behave differently in the presence of light. In these structures, the N-terminal His-tag and several neighboring residues play a highly unusual structural and functional role in stabilizing the truncated GFP by substituting as a surrogate β-strand in the groove vacated by the native strand. This finding provides an explanation for the seemingly very different peptide binding and photodissociation properties of split proteins involving β-strands 10 and 11. We show that these truncated GFPs can bind other non-native sequences, and this promiscuity invites the possibility for rational design of sequences optimized for strand binding and photodissociation, both useful for optogenetic applications.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5815829PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b10680DOI Listing

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