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Characterization and Use of TurboLuc Luciferase as a Reporter for High-Throughput Assays
Author(s) -
Douglas S. Auld,
Janaki Narahari,
Pei-i Ho,
Dominick Casalena,
Vy Nguyen,
Evelina Cirbaite,
Doug Hughes,
John D. Daly,
Brian Webb
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
biochemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.43
H-Index - 253
eISSN - 1520-4995
pISSN - 0006-2960
DOI - 10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00290
Subject(s) - luciferase , reporter gene , bioreporter , high throughput screening , luciferases , enzyme , luciferin , chemistry , biochemistry , microbiology and biotechnology , biology , gene expression , gene , transfection
Luciferase-based reporter assays are powerful tools for monitoring gene expression in cells because of their ultrasensitive detection capacity and wide dynamic range. Here we describe the characterization and use of a luciferase reporter enzyme derived from the marine copepod Metridia luciferase family, referred to as TurboLuc luciferase (TurboLuc). To develop TurboLuc, the wild-type luciferase was modified to decrease its size, increase brightness, slow luminescent signal decay, and provide for efficient intracellular expression. To determine the enzyme susceptibility to compound inhibition and judge the suitability of using of TurboLuc as a reporter in screening assays, purified TurboLuc enzyme was screened for inhibitors using two different compound libraries. No inhibitors of this enzyme were identified in a library representative of typical diverse low molecular weight (LMW) compounds using a purified TurboLuc enzyme assay supporting that such libraries will show very low interference with this enzyme. We were able to identify a few inhibitors from a purified natural product library which can serve as useful tools to validate assays using TurboLuc. In addition to the inhibitor profile for TurboLuc we describe the use of this reporter in cells employing miniaturized assay volumes within 1536-well plates. TurboLuc luciferase is the smallest luciferase reporter enzyme described to date (16 kDa), shows bright luminescence and low interference by LMW compounds, and therefore should provide an ideal reporter in assays applied to high-throughput screening.

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