
Expression of N-Terminal Cysteine Aβ42 and Conjugation to Generate Fluorescent and Biotinylated Aβ42
Author(s) -
Sheng Zhang,
Gretchen Guaglia,
Michael A. Morris,
Stan Yoo,
William J. Howitz,
Li Xing,
JianGuo Zheng,
Hannah Jusuf,
Grace Huizar,
Jonathan Lin,
Adam G. Kreutzer,
James S. Nowick
Publication year - 2021
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.1c00105
Subject(s) - cysteine , biotin , biotinylation , peptide , fluorophore , fluorescence , maleimide , chemistry , biochemistry , escherichia coli , methionine , amino acid , gene , enzyme , physics , quantum mechanics , polymer chemistry
Fluorescent derivatives of the β-amyloid peptides (Aβ) are valuable tools for studying the interactions of Aβ with cells. Facile access to labeled expressed Aβ offers the promise of Aβ with greater sequence and stereochemical integrity, without impurities from amino acid deletion and epimerization. Here, we report methods for the expression of Aβ 42 with an N-terminal cysteine residue, Aβ (C1-42) , and its conjugation to generate Aβ 42 bearing fluorophores or biotin. The methods rely on the hitherto unrecognized observation that expression of the Aβ (MC1-42) gene yields the Aβ (C1-42) peptide, because the N-terminal methionine is endogenously excised by Escherichia coli . Conjugation of Aβ (C1-42) with maleimide-functionalized fluorophores or biotin affords the N-terminally labeled Aβ 42 . The expression affords ∼14 mg of N-terminal cysteine Aβ from 1 L of bacterial culture. Subsequent conjugation affords ∼3 mg of labeled Aβ from 1 L of bacterial culture with minimal cost for labeling reagents. High-performance liquid chromatography analysis indicates the N-terminal cysteine Aβ to be >97% pure and labeled Aβ peptides to be 94-97% pure. Biophysical studies show that the labeled Aβ peptides behave like unlabeled Aβ and suggest that labeling of the N-terminus does not substantially alter the properties of the Aβ. We further demonstrate applications of the fluorophore-labeled Aβ peptides by using fluorescence microscopy to visualize their interactions with mammalian cells and bacteria. We anticipate that these methods will provide researchers convenient access to useful N-terminally labeled Aβ, as well as Aβ with an N-terminal cysteine that enables further functionalization.