Green-fluorescent protein from the bioluminescent jellyfish Clytia gregaria is an obligate dimer and does not form a stable complex with the Ca(2+)-discharged photoprotein clytin

Biochemistry. 2011 May 24;50(20):4232-41. doi: 10.1021/bi101671p. Epub 2011 Apr 27.

Abstract

Green-fluorescent protein (GFP) is the origin of the green bioluminescence color exhibited by several marine hydrozoans and anthozoans. The mechanism is believed to be Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) within a luciferase-GFP or photoprotein-GFP complex. As the effect is found in vitro at micromolar concentrations, for FRET to occur this complex must have an affinity in the micromolar range. We present here a fluorescence dynamics investigation of the recombinant bioluminescence proteins from the jellyfish Clytia gregaria, the photoprotein clytin in its Ca(2+)-discharged form that is highly fluorescent (λ(max) = 506 nm) and its GFP (cgreGFP; λ(max) = 500 nm). Ca(2+)-discharged clytin shows a predominant fluorescence lifetime of 5.7 ns, which is assigned to the final emitting state of the bioluminescence reaction product, coelenteramide anion, and a fluorescence anisotropy decay or rotational correlation time of 12 ns (20 °C), consistent with tight binding and rotation with the whole protein. A 34 ns correlation time combined with a translational diffusion constant and molecular brightness from fluorescence fluctuation spectroscopy all confirm that cgreGFP is an obligate dimer down to nanomolar concentrations. Within the dimer, the two chromophores have a coupled excited-state transition yielding fluorescence depolarization via FRET with a transfer correlation time of 0.5 ns. The 34 ns time of cgreGFP showed no change upon addition of a 1000-fold excess of Ca(2+)-discharged clytin, indicating no stable complexation below 0.2 mM. It is proposed that any bioluminescence FRET complex with micromolar affinity must be one formed transiently by the cgreGFP dimer with a short-lived (millisecond) intermediate in the clytin reaction pathway.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Absorption
  • Animals
  • Calcium / metabolism*
  • Green Fluorescent Proteins / chemistry*
  • Green Fluorescent Proteins / metabolism*
  • Hydrozoa*
  • Luminescent Proteins / metabolism*
  • Models, Molecular
  • Protein Multimerization*
  • Protein Structure, Quaternary
  • Protein Structure, Secondary
  • Spectrometry, Fluorescence
  • Time Factors

Substances

  • Luminescent Proteins
  • phialidin
  • Green Fluorescent Proteins
  • Calcium