BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0001] This invention relates to a modified bioluminescent system comprising a fluorescent
molecule covalently linked with a photoprotein allowing the transfer of energy by
Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET). This invention also relates to
the use of the modified bioluminescent system in
in vivo and
in vitro assays.
[0002] Calcium is implicated in the regulation of a great variety of intracellular processes
(1). Several techniques are most commonly used for intracellular Ca
++ monitoring. Patch-clamp and Ca
++ selective microelectrodes give cumulative measurements of Ca
++ fluxes in a restricted number of cells. On the other hand, intracellular [Ca
++] dynamics in large populations of cells can be visualized with fluorescent probes
(2). Genetic tools could provide new methods for Ca
++ monitoring.
[0003] Two groups of genetic Ca
++ probes are at present available. The first category uses the principle of Fluorescence
Resonance Energy Transfer (FRET) between two variants of the green fluorescent protein
(GFP). The two GFP are covalently linked by a calmodulin binding sequence alone or
in combination with calmodulin so that intramolecular FRET does (3) or does not (4)
occur in response to Ca
++ influx. References (3) and (31) describe "cameleons" molecules comprising two GFP
variants, calmodulin, a linker and the caM-binding domain of myosin light chain kinase.
In the presence of high concentrations of Ca
2+, the calmodulin and the caM-binding domain fuse together, enabling, after high speed
two-photon excitation, the transfer by FRET of the energy received by the first GFP
variant to the second GFP variant. Therefore, the second variant emits, at a different
wavelength, a strong signal, indicating thus the presence of high concentration of
Ca
2+. The emission and detection of the signal thus require the correct interaction of
the calmodulin and the caM-binding domain, as well as the high speed two-photon excitation.
Consequently, the cameleons and two-photon excitation are complementary. The second
category is composed by bioluminescent proteins, such as aequorin (5, 6). The active
protein is formed in the presence of molecular oxygen from apoaequorin (189 amino
acids) and its luciferin, coelenterazine (Mr 423) (7).
[0004] The binding of Ca
++ to aequorin, which has three EF-hand structures characteristic of Ca
++ binding sites, induces a conformational change resulting in the oxidation of coelenterazine
via an intramolecular reaction. Moreover, the coelenteramide so produced is in an
excited state, and blue light (max: 470nm) is emitted when it returns to its ground
state (8). Such a bioluminescent genetic marker presents the advantage over Ca
++-sensitive fluorescent dyes of being easily targeted to specific cells and in subcellular
compartments with appropriate regulatory elements and peptide signals (9). The bioluminescent
process does not require light excitation like fluorescent probes or proteins, and
thus does not induce autofluorescence, photobleaching and biological degradation problems.
Furthermore, aequorin is not toxic, does not bind other divalent cations and does
not interfere with the [Ca
++]
i buffer system even when microinjected at high concentrations. Its low affinity for
Ca
++ (Kd= 10 (µM) is probably responsible for this and makes aequorin a good sensor in
the range of biological [Ca
++] variations.
[0005] Although providing a good ratio of signal over background, aequorin signals are very
difficult to detect because of aequorin's low light quantum yield, that is, the number
of emitted photons per protein that bind Ca
++. In the jellyfish,
Aequorea victoria, from which aequorin has been isolated (10), the protein is associated with the GFP
(11). After Ca
++ binding, the energy acquired by aequorin is transferred from the activated oxyluciferin
to GFP without emission of blue light. The GFP acceptor fluorophore is excited by
the oxycoelenterazine through a radiationless energy transfer. Then, a green light
(max, 509nm) is emitted when the excited GFP returns to its ground state (12).
[0006] Such intermolecular radiationless energy transfer is not unusual in bioluminescence
and has already been shown to increase the quantum yield of the bioluminescent process
in
Renilla, another coelenterate (13). The gain measured in
vitro ranges from 3 to 5 fold (14). It is possible to reconstitute
in vitro the
Renilla system and obtain the spectral shift with low equimolar concentrations of its components
because the luciferase and the green fluorescent protein bind together (14).
[0007] In the
Aequorea system, binding between purified photoprotein and GFP does not occur in solution,
even when present at high concentrations (15).
In vivo, energy transfer occurs because of the high concentration of GFP. It can be obtained
in
vitro through the co-adsorption of aequorin and GFP on DEAE cellulose membranes (15). The
Förster equation shows that the efficiency of this process depends on several conditions
described in the case of FRET. The emission spectrum of the donor must have the greatest
overlap with the excitation spectrum of the acceptor. The energy transferred is also
strongly dependent on the geometry, in particular, the relative orientation and distance
of the two dipoles and modulated by their respective motion (16).
[0008] An aim of this invention is to develop a dual reporter gene combining properties
of Ca
++ -sensitivity and fluorescence of aequorin and GFP, respectively. The fusion protein,
which can be detected with classical epifluorescence, can be used to monitor calcium
activities. The configuration of the molecules of the invention increases their overall
turnover and allows an efficient intramolecular Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy
Transfer (CRET). As a result, the quantum yield of aequorin appears to be higher.
This invention shows that physiological calcium signals can be visualized in single
eukaryotic cells with an intensified CCD camera. Other constructs described here target
the fusion protein to the neurite membrane.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] This invention thus provides a modified bioluminescent system comprising a fluorescent
molecule covalently linked with a photoprotein, wherein the link between the two proteins
has the function to stabilize the modified bioluminescent system and allow the transfer
of the energy by Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET). In a preferred
embodiment, the bioluminescent system comprises a GFP protein covalently linked to
an aequorin protein, wherein the link between the two proteins has the function to
stabilize the modified bioluminescent system and to allow the transfer of the energy
by Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET).
[0010] In one embodiment of a modified bioluminescent system according to the invention,
the bioluminescent system comprises a GFP protein covalently linked to an aequorin
protein, wherein the link between the two proteins is constituted by at least 5 amino
acids and optionally at least 5 amino acids and at least one copy of 9 amino acids.
The link has the function of stabilizing the system and allowing the transfer of energy
by Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET).
[0011] In a preferred embodiment, the bioluminescent system comprises a GFP protein covalently
linked to an aequorin protein, wherein the link between the two proteins is preferably
constituted by at least 5 amino acids and five copies of 9 amino acids and has the
function of stabilizing the system and allowing the transfer of energy by Chemiluminescence
Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET).
[0012] The two proteins can be separately or together functional. In addition, the modified
bioluminescent system can be calcium sensitive and/or light sensitive.
[0013] This invention also provides a method of screening
in vitro a change in a physical, chemical, biochemical, or biological condition. The method
comprises:
- a) providing in different samples a bioluminescent system according to the invention
in a reaction system containing an analyte of interest;
- b) measuring whether light is produced; and
- c) detecting a change based on the production of light.
[0014] Further, this invention provides a method of screening
in vivo a change in a physical, chemical, biochemical, or biological condition. The method
comprises the steps of:
- a) administering to a mammal an acceptable composition comprising a bioluminescent
system according to the invention;
- b) detecting whether light is produced; and
- c) optionally measuring ionic concentration of calcium flux.
[0015] In addition, this invention provides a composition comprising a purified polypeptide,
wherein the composition has the functional characteristics of binding calcium ions
and permitting measureable energy, said energy depending of the quantity of calcium
bound and of the quantity of polypeptides in said composition in absence of any light
excitation.
[0016] In addition, this invention provides a purified polypeptide having the amino acid
sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1; SEQ ID NO: 2; SEQ ID NO: 3; SEQ ID NO: 4; SEQ ID NO: 5;
and SEQ ID NO: 6.
[0017] In other embodiments, this invention provides a polynucleotide having the sequence
of SEQ ID NO: 7; SEQ ID NO: 8; SEQ ID NO: 9; SEQ ID NO: 10; SEQ ID NO: 11; and SEQ
ID NO: 12.
[0018] This invention also provides a culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing
the plasmid No. I-2507; the plasmid No. 1-2508; the plasmid No. I-2509; the plasmid
No. I-2510; the plasmid No. 1-2511; the plasmid No. I-2512; or the plasmid No. I-2513.
[0019] Further, this invention provides a peptide linker having the function after translation
to approach a donor site to an acceptor site in optimal conditions to permit a direct
transfer of energy by chemiluminescence in a purified polypeptide according to the
invention. The nucleotide linker can have, for example, the nucleotide sequence of
SEQ ID No: 13; SEQ ID No: 14; SEQ ID No: 15; SEQ ID No: 16, or SEQ ID No: 17. The
peptide linker can comprise at least 5 amino acids and comprising the amino acid sequence
of SEQ ID No: 18; SEQ ID No: 19; SEQ ID No: 20; SEQ ID No: 21, or SEQ ID No: 22.
[0020] A kit for measuring the transfer of energy
in vivo or
in vitro contains at least one of the polypeptides according to the invention or the polynucleotide
according to the invention and the reagents necessary for visualizing or detecting
the said transfer in presence or in absence of a molecule of interest.
[0021] In another embodiment, the invention provides a fusion protein of the formula:
GFP - LINKER - AEQ;
[0022] wherein GFP is green fluorescent protein; AEQ is aequorin; and LINKER is a polypeptide
of 4-63 amino acids, preferably 14-50 amino acids.
[0023] The LINKER can comprise the following amino acids:
[0024] (Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO: 25])
n, wherein n is 1-5. Preferably n is 1 or n is 5. LINKER can also include the amino
acid sequence Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 26].
[0025] Another fusion protein for energy transfer from aequorin to green fluorescent protein
by Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET) following activation of the
aequorin in the presence of Ca
++ has the formula:
GFP - LINKER - AEQ;
[0026] wherein GFP is green fluorescent protein; AEQ is aequorin; and LINKER comprises the
following amino acids:
[0027] (Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO: 25])
n, wherein n is 1-5; and wherein the fusion protein has an affinity for Ca
++ ions and a half-life of at least 24 hours. The LINKER can include the amino acid
sequence Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 26]. In addition, the fusion protein can
further comprise a peptide signal sequence for targeting the fusion protein to a cell
or to a subcellular compartment.
[0028] This invention also provides polynucleotides encoding fusion proteins as described
above.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0029] This invention will be described with reference to the drawings in which:
[0030] Fig. 1 is a schematic map of different constructions. All the constructs were under
the control of the human cytomegalovirus promoter (PCMV). An asterisk indicates the
position of a Val-163-Ala mutation. In pGA, the coding sequences of GFP and aequorin
are separated by 5 codons. One to five linkers (in brackets) have been added in pG
iA where i is the number of linker. Linkers were oriented so as to encode a 9 amino
acid repeat. Complete Synaptotagmin 1 or its transmembrane part (tSyn) were fused
in frame with the G5A.
[0031] Fig. 2 depicts Ca
++ CRET activities on cellular extracts. Emission spectra of aequorin and several GFP-Aequorin
fusion proteins were calibrated as a percentage of maximum intensity. CRET measurements
are expressed as the ratio of green (500nm) over blue (450nm) photons.
[0032] Fig. 3 depicts GFP fluorescence of GFP-Apoaequorin proteins in Neuro2A cells transfected
with pGm (A), pGA (B), pG2A (C), and pG5A (D). Confocal superposition of GFP fluorescence
and immunostaining of synaptotagmin in cells expressing either pSG5A (E) or pStG5A
(F) is shown.
[0033] Fig. 4 depicts Ca
++ -induced bioluminescence detected at the single cell level. Neuro2A cells transfected
with pGA (A. 1-4) or pSG5A (B) were pre-incubated with 5µM coelenterazine in a Ca
++-free buffer. (A.3) GFP Fluorescence made it possible to choose transfected cells.
The background recorded before CaCl
2 addition (A2) corresponds to the relative light unit (RLU)-level at time 0 of experiment
(A.4, B). Intensities of fluorescence and bioluminescence activity are translated
in scaled pseudocolors. Representative pictures of the chosen field are shown after
addition of 5mM CaCl
2 and 5 µM A23187 at 13 sec and 159 sec, respectively, after the beginning of the acquisition
(A. 1). (A.4) Each profile indicates the intensity of light emitted by a single cell.
[0034] Five regions of interest were defined by encircling individual cell soma. With pGA
(data not shown) or pSG5A (B) transfection, a high concentration of CaCl
2, (100mM) was added at the end of the experiment (500sec.) to check that the bioluminescent
protein was still active. (C) Control experiments were made with Fluo-3 AM on mock-transfected
Neuro2A cells.
[0035] Fig. 5 depicts the results of analysis of protein stability for various fusion proteins.
[0036] Fig. 6 depicts the results of the determination of the Ca
++ affinity of aequorin and fusion protein G5A.
[0037] Fig. 7 depicts the calibration curves between the bioluminescent activity and Ca2+,
for G5A, SG5A, and aequorin.
[0038] Fig. 8 shows fluorescence and Ca2+-induced bioluminescent activity in dissociated
neurons in culture infected with adenoviral-G5A vectors.
[0039] Fig. 9 shows fluorescence and Ca2+-induced bioluminescent activities in dissociated
neurons in culture infected with adenoviral-SG5A vectors.
[0040] Fig. 10 shows representative pattern of luminescence activity after injection of
GA plasmid at the one cell stage of
Xenopus embryo.
[0041] Fig. 11 shows a transgenic
Xenopus larva with GFP-aequorin.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0042] Among the coelenterates, bioluminescent species exist. Numerous studies have shown
that the bioluminescence is generated by photoproteins that are sensitive to calcium.
These proteins emit a flash of light in response to an increase in the concentration
of calcium ions. Among these photoproteins, aequorin is one of the most well studied
(Blinks
et al., 1976).
[0043] Isolated in the jellyfish,
Aequoria victoria (Shimomura
et al., 1962), aequorin, after binding with three calcium ions, emits a flash of blue light
with a spectrum of maximum wavelength 470 nm. Contrary to a classical luciferase-luciferin
reaction, the emission of light does not require oxygen, and the total amount of light
is proportional to the amount of protein. Oxygen is necessary, however, to reconstitute
the aequorin, by the action of apoaequorin, a protein with a molecular mass of 21kDa,
and coelenterazine. The emission of photons is caused by a peroxidation reaction in
the coelenterazine, after binding with the three calcium ions on the aequorin. Two
hypotheses have been suggested for this process: (i) the binding between aequorin
and calcium ions induces the emission of light by a conformational change in the protein,
allowing oxygen to react with coelenterazine, and (ii) oxygen plays a role in the
binding between coelenterazine and apoaequorin (Shimomura and Johnson, 1978). Aequorin
may be recreated
in vitro and
in vivo by eliminating oxyluciferin, adding luciferin (coelenterazine) in the presence of
β-mercaptoethanol and oxygen (Shimomura and Johnson, 1978). The necessity of adding
β-mercaptoethanol or a reducing agent to reconstitute aequorin is presumably due to
the presence of at least one sulfhydryl group of cysteine 145 included in a negatively
charged microenvironment (Charbonneau
et al., 1985).
[0044] More than thirty semi-synthetic aequorins having different affinities for calcium
ions have been characterized, based on the type of coelenterazine that binds to the
protein (Shimomura, 1991; incorporated by reference herein). The dissociation constant
between aequorin and the calcium ions is estimated to be between 0.1 mM (Allen
et al., 1997) and 1 mM (Prasher
et al., 1985). Although the relationship between light emission and calcium ion concentration
may not be linear, a logarithmic relationship between the emission of light and the
calcium ion concentration has nonetheless been determined (Johnson and Shimomura,
1978). Indeed, a 200-fold increase in the signal to background noise ratio is measured
when the Ca
++ concentration goes from 10
-7M to 10
-6M, and by a factor of 1000, from 10
-6M to 10
-5M (Cobbold and Rink, 1987). Moreover, the kinetics of the signal emission is rapid
enough to detect transitory increases in Ca
++ ion concentrations. An increase in light intensity with a time constant of 6 msec,
under calcium saturation conditions, has been shown (Blinks
et al., 1978). Aequorin is thus a photoprotein that is well adapted to measure rapid and
elevated increases in Ca
++ ions under physiological conditions.
[0045] The cloning of the apoaequorin gene by Prasher et al., (1985) and Inouye
et al. (1985) has led to the creation of expression vectors, making possible its targeting
in a specific cell compartment by fusion with nuclear, cytoplasmic, mitochondrial,
endoplasmic reticulum, or plasma membrane signal peptides (Kendall
et al., 1992; Di Giorgio
et al., 1996). In addition, the
in vivo expression of the protein makes possible its detection at low levels, leaving the
intracellular physiology of calcium undisturbed.
[0046] In nature, photoprotein activity is very often linked to a second protein. The most
common is the "green fluorescent protein" or GFP. The light emitted in this case is
in fact green. The hypothesis of an energy transfer between aequorin and GFP by a
radiative mechanism was proposed in the 1960s by Johnson
et al., (1962). The blue light emitted by aequorin in the presence of Ca
++ is presumably absorbed by GFP and reemitted with a spectrum having a maximum wave
length of 509 nm Other studies have shown that this transfer of energy occurs through
a non-radiative mechanism made possible through the formation of heterotetramer between
GFP and aequorin. Morise
et al. (1974) have succeeded in visualizing this energy transfer
in vitro, and a co-adsorption of the two molecules on a DEAE-cellulose membrane facilitates
the process. Through this mechanism, it thus appears possible to increase the quantum
efficiency of the system (Ward and Cormier, 1976).
[0047] GFP, also isolated in the jelly fish
Aequoria victoria, was recently cloned (Prasher
et al., 1992). It has been used in different biological systems as a cellular expression
and lineage marker (Cubitt
et al., 1995). Detecting this protein using classical fluorescence microscopy is relatively
easy to do in both living organisms and fixed tissue. In addition, fluorescent emission
does not require the addition of a cofactor or coenzyme and depends on an autocatalytic
post-translational process. The fluorophore, consisting of nine amino acids, is characterized
by the formation of a cycle between serine 65 and glycine 67, which gives rise to
an intermediate imidazolidine 5, followed by oxidation of tyrosine 66, transforming
it into dehydrotyrosine (Heim
et al., 1994). This group is found inside a cylinder composed of 11β layers, which constitutes
an environment that interacts directly with the chromophore (Yang
et al., 1996).
[0048] Monitoring calcium fluxes in real time could help to understand the development,
the plasticity, and the functioning of the central nervous system. In jellyfish, the
chemiluminescent, calcium binding, aequorin protein is associated with the green fluorescent
protein (GFP), and a green bioluminescent signal is emitted upon Ca
++ stimulation. Aequorin alone is difficult to detect on the cellular and subcellular
level owing to the weak emission of photons after excitation.
[0049] The development of a new marker sensitive to calcium with a higher quantum yield
was therefore initiated. This invention utilizes Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy
Transfer (CRET) between the two molecules. Calcium sensitive bioluminescent reporter
genes have been constructed by fusing GFP and aequorin resulting in much more light
being emitted.
[0050] Chemiluminescent and fluorescent activities of these fusion proteins have been assessed
in mammalian cells. Cystosolic Ca
++ increases were imaged at the single cell level with a cooled intensified CCD (coupled
charge device) camera. This bifunctional reporter gene should allow the investigation
of calcium activities in neuronal networks and in specific subcellular compartments
in transgenic animals.
[0051] GFP-aequorin Fusion Proteins as Ca
++-Activated Reporter Genes.
[0052] According to this invention, a fusion protein has been constructed with aequorin
and GFP to increase the quantum yield of Ca
++-induced bioluminescence. This activity can not be increased simply by co-expressing
GFP with aequorin (data not shown). A thermoresistant GFP (Gm) was fused in frame
with the NH
2 terminal region of apoaequorin (Fig. 1), since the C-terminal proline residue has
been shown to be implicated in the Ca
++-activated bioluminescent process (20).
[0053] Different constructs have been made with increasing size of linker between GFP and
apoaequorin The shortest spacer is formed by 5. amino acids and the longest by 50
amino acids (Fig. 1). All the fusion proteins showed a better Ca
++-triggered bioluminescent activity than aequorin alone. The increases of light emitting
activity ranged from 19 to 65 times (Table 1) possibly because of greater protein
stability.
TABLE 1
| CA++ INDUCED CHEMILUMINESCENCE ACTIVITIES |
| Name |
Mean ± SEM* RLU x 106 / 10 Uβgal |
| pA |
0.15 (0.10; 021) |
| pGa |
10.01 ± 4.4 |
| pGlA |
2.96 (3.39; 2.53) |
| pG2A |
8.39 (9.54; 7.23) |
| pG4A |
7.78 (12.02; 3.53) |
| pG5A |
8.15 ± 1.72 |
*SEM is indicated when more than two measures were made.
Otherwise the two measures are given. |
[0054] The plasmids identified in Table 1 are described in detail hereafter. The following
sequence identifiers are used to describe the amino acid and nucleotide sequences
of each plasmid insert.
TABLE 2
| SEQUENCE IDENTIFIERS |
| Plasmid Insert |
Amino Acid Sequence |
Nucleotide Sequence |
| A |
* |
* |
| GA |
SEQ ID NO: 1 |
SEQ ID NO: 7 |
| G1A |
SEQ ID NO: 2 |
SEQ ID NO: 8 |
| G2A |
SEQ ID NO: 3 |
SEQ ID NO: 9 |
| G4A |
SEQ ID NO: 4 |
SEQ ID NO: 10 |
| G5A |
SEQ ID NO: 5 |
SEQ ID NO: 11 |
| SeG5A |
SEQ ID NO: 6 |
12 |
| *The nucleotide sequence of apoaequorin is contained in U.S. 5,422,266. |
[0055] The identity of the linker used in these constructs is as follows:
DNA sequence of GFP-aequorin linker
[0056]
| pGA (strain I-2507) |
TCC GGC CTC AGA TCT [SEQ ID NO: 13] |
| pGlA (strain I-2508) |
 |
| pG2A (strain I-2509) |
 |
| pG4A (strain I-2510) |
 |
| pG5A (strain I-2511) |
 |
| pSeG5A (strain I-2512) and pStG5A (strain I-2513) same linker sequence as pG5A. |
Peptide sequence of linker
[0057]
| pGA |
Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser (SEQ ID NO: 18] |
| pGlA |
Ser Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 19] |
| pG2A |
 |
| pG4A |
 |
| pG5A |
 |
| pSeG5A and pStG5A idem than pGSA |
[0058] Plasmids containing the foregoing polynucleotides have been deposited at the Collection
Nationale de Cultures de Microorganismes ("C.N.C.M."), Institut Pasteur, 28, rue du
Docteur Roux, 75724 Paris Cedex 15, France, as follows:
| Insert |
Plasmid |
Accession No. |
Deposit Date |
| A |
pAeq+ |
I-2506 |
June 22, 2000 |
| GA |
pGa |
I-2507 |
June 22, 2000 |
| GlA |
pG1A |
I-2508 |
June 22, 2000 |
| G2A |
pG2A |
I-2509 |
June 22, 2000 |
| G4A |
pG4A |
I-2510 |
June 22, 2000 |
| G5A |
pG5A |
I-2511 |
June 22, 2000 |
| SeG5A |
pSeG5A |
I-2512 |
June 22, 2000 |
| StG5A |
pStG5A |
I-2513 |
June 22, 2000 |
[0059] Recombinant apoaequorin is unstable within the cytosol, with a half-life of approximately
20 minutes (21). In contrast, GFP is a very stable protein and probably stabilizes
apoaequorin in the chimeric proteins. The turnover times of the different cytosolic
proteins were estimated on transient expression in COS 7 cells by treatment with puromycin
(50µg/ml) for 6 hours. Over this period, most fusion proteins presented a 30% decrease
of activity compared with the 80% loss of apoaequorin when alone (Figure 5). It has
been observed that,
in vitro, the fusion proteins of the invention were more sensitive than aequorin alone. G5A
gives a significant signal over background with Ca
++ concentration as low as 38 nM, whereas aequorin needs 28 times more calcium (1µM)
to yield a comparable signal (Figure 6). Energy transfer may also improve the quantum
yield of GFP-aequorin allowing a more efficient calcium ions detection. To discriminate
among the factors contributing to the higher light emission, it will be necessary
to study the relaxation mechanisms of the GFP fluorescent excited state on purified
hybrid proteins.
[0060] More generally, one embodiment of this invention provides a chimeric protein starting
with the genes for GFP and aequorin. Improved quantum yield will depend on the functional
coupling of the proteins by a Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET) mechanism.
Thus, after the reconstitution of aequorin and its binding with calcium ions, the
activated aequorin transmits its energy to the GFP, which in turn emits a green light
to return to its ground state. Optimizing the functional coupling between the two
proteins has focused on three points:
- 1. Improving the induction of a conformational change in the GFP at 37°C, which leads
to a higher emission of GFP in the mammalian cells;
- 2. Changing to the use of aequorin codons adapted to mammalian cells to enhance its
expression; and
- 3. Adding a linkage peptide between the two proteins.
[0061] With respect to the third point, an initial molecular construct with five amino acids
separating the two proteins was first completed. Then a sequence of nine amino acids
was added in a sequence of one to five copies. These constructs were placed in a eukaryote
expression vector under control of the CMV (cytomegalovirus) promoter allowing their
functional ability to be confirmed. These fusion proteins may be identified: (i) by
the GFP signal, through excitation of the biological preparations with light of wavelength
470 nm, by fluorescence microscopy (FTTC filter); (ii) by aequorin activity, through
emission of blue light after binding with Ca
++ ions.
[0062] The following terms have the following meanings when used herein:
Luminescence
[0063] Emission of an electromagnetic radiation from an atom or molecule in UV, in visible
or IR. This emission results from the transition from an electronically excited state
towards a state from weaker energy, generally the ground state.
Fluorescence
[0064] Fluorescence produced by a singlet, very short, excited electronically. This luminescence
disappears at the same time as the source from excitation.
Chemiluminescence
[0065] Luminescence resulting from a chemical reaction.
Bioluminescence
[0066] Visible chemiluminescence, produced by living organisms. The invention mimics the
system naturally present in the jellyfish, without fixation to a support
Bioluminescent system
[0067] The bioluminescent system according to the invention is a chimeric tripartite molecule,
in which the middle is a peptide linker, and a coenzyme (i.e., coelenterazine). The
first molecule and the second molecule covalently attached with the linker can be
everything if they have for the first a donor site and for the second an acceptor
site attached on it (receptors-linker-ligand, antibody-linker antigen). The chimeric
protein can be fused to a fragment of tetanus toxin for its retrograde and transynaptic
transport on axon by
Coen, L., Osta, R., Maury, M., and Brulet, P., Construction of hybrid proteins that
migrate retrogradely and transynaptically into the central nervous system. Proc. Natl.
Acad. Sci. (USA) 94 (1997) 9400-9405, or fused to a membrane receptor.
Non-radiative
[0068] No emission of photon from aequorin to the GTP when aequorin is bounded by calcium
ions (therefore there is no transmission of blue light by aequorin in the invention,
the energy transfer is directly made between the two proteins).
FRET system
[0069] Transfer of energy by resonance by fluorescence (i.e., between two variants of GFP).
References
[0070]
Fluorescent indicators for Ca2+ based on green fluorescent proteins and calmodulin.
Miyawaki, A., Llopis, J., Heim, R, McCaffery, J.M., Adams, J.A., Ikura, M and Tsien,
RY. Nature, (1997) Vol. 388 pp. 882-887.
Detection in living cells of Ca2+-dependent changes in the fluorescence emission of
an indicator composed of two green fluorescent protein variants linked by a calmodulin-binding
sequence. A new class of fluorescent indicators.
Romoser, V.A., Hinkle, P.M and Persechini, A., J. Biol. Chem., (1997) Vol. 272, pp.
13270-13274.
CRET
[0071] Transfer of energy by resonance by chemiluminescence (i.e., fusion protein with GFP-aequorin
(jellyfish Aequorea) but without linker or GFP-obeline).
Reference:
BRET
[0073] Transfer of energy by resonance by bioluminescence (i.e., interaction between GFP
and luciferase (jellyfish Renilla).
Reference:
Application 1: Study of calcium signals from a cell population in a eukaryotic organism.
[0075] Targeting the bioluminiscent protein sensitive to calcium in a cell population or
in a specific tissue may be achieved through homologous recombination or by transgenesis
under the control of a specific promoter. Replacing genes by homologous recombination
in embryonic cells in mice, such, as
Hoxc-8 and Otxl, with this new marker will make it possible to obtain new lines of mutant
mice. This approach will permit the detection of electrical activity in a group of
neural cells, and will also make it possible to complete the phenotype study of mutants
obtained by replacing the
LacZ gene (Le Mouéllic
et al., 1990, 1992; Acampora et
al., 1996). For the
Hoxc-8 locus, the expression of the marker should be located in the ventral horns of the
spinal chord beginning at section C7 (Le Mouellic
et al., 1990). Anomalies in the somatotopic organization of the motor neurons innervating
these muscles have been brought to light (Tiret
et al.,1998), and a study of the role of the flux of calcium in the establishment of these
neural connections during development may thus be undertaken. In the
Otxl model, the transgene should be expressed in specific regions of the forebrain, given
that an expression localized at layers V and VI of the cerebral cortex, and in regions
of the diencephalon, mesencephalon, and cerebellum have been shown (Frantz
et al., 1994). Mutant mice obtained by the replacement of the gene by the LacZ gene show
a reduction in the thickness of the cerebral cortex and anomalies in the hippocampus,
mesencephalon, and cerebellum (Acampora
et al.,1996)
. The loss of balance and rotatory movement observed in these mice can presumably be
attributed to anomalies in the sensory organs, specifically in the eye and inner ear.
These mice are also subject to generalized epileptic seizures. The establishment of
faulty connections and/or abnormal electrical activity could be implicated in the
genesis of these pathological processes (McNamara, 1992). The use of this new marker
will, on the one hand, make it possible to verify these hypotheses through a functional
and dynamic approach, and on the other, to address the development of epilepsy in
the adult as well as during development Application 2: Study of the role of intracellular
calcium
[0076] Calcium is involved in a large number of cellular mechanisms, such as cellular migration,
membrane excitability, mitochondrial metabolism, secretion, mitosis, and synaptic
plasticity (Berridge
et al., 1998). Recording calcium information at the cellular and subcellular level is complex,
involving spatial, temporal and quantitative factors. Targeting marker of the invention
to different subcellular compartments is possible by fusion with a peptide signal,
for example, synoptotagmine.
[0077] Example A: Targeting the nuclear compartment will make it possible to study the role
of calcium in transcription activation mechanisms and during the mechanisms related
to programmed cell death (apoptosis).
[0078] Example B: Targeting two fusion proteins with GFP produces different emission spectra
in the two cell compartments, for example, cytoplasm and the endoplasmic reticulum
will make it possible to study the regulation of the calcium flux during cell activations.
[0079] Example C: Targeting the fusion protein in the synapses will make it possible to
study the calcium activity linked to electrical activity in neural cells during the
release of neurotransmitters. The first possibility is the achievement of a triple
fusion between a synaptic protein, such as synaptotagmine or SNAP25, GFP, and aequorin.
The existence of protein-protein interactions during exocytosis makes it possible
to consider a second possibility: A functional coupling between GFP and aequorin,
the one in fusion with a vesicular protein and the other with a plasma protein. A
signal will be obtained only during the interaction of the different proteins in the
presence of an increase in the calcium ion concentration. Application 3: Study of
calcium signals at the cell population level
[0080] Triple fusing of a protein having intercellular transport properties such as fragment
C of the tetanus toxin (TTC) or the VP22 protein of the herpes virus with GFP and
aequorin will make it possible to observed the calcium activity in a population of
connected cells, for example in a neural network.
Description of the construction of a bioluminescent marker expression vector sensitive
to calcium ions
Stage 1: pEGFP-CldKS (KpnI-SmaI Deletion)
[0081] Double digestion of pEGFP-Cl plasmid (Clontech, see figure) with
KpnI and
SmaI enzymes. After blunt ending the KpnI extension with "Mung bean" nuclease, the two
extremities are ligated.

Stage 2: pEGFP-CImut (GFP mutagenesis)
[0082] Four mutagenesis oligonucleotides were used on a single-strand molecule prepared
using pEGFP-CIdKS. Each oligonucleotide comprises one or several mismatches (identified
below in lower case letters), causing the desired mutation. In the pEGFP-Clmut plasmid
chosen, cut with the SacII enzyme but not the AgeI enzyme, all of the mutations were
verified by sequencing.
- Destruction of the
AgeI site, introduction of a
SacII site and deletion of a Valine codon normally absent in "wild-type" GFP (
Prasher, D.C., Eckenrode, R.K, Ward, W.W., Prendergast, F.G., and Cormier, M.J., Primary
structure of the Aequorea victoria green-fluorescent protein. Gene 111 (1992) 229-233.)
| |
SacII |
Met |
|
Ser |
Lys |
Gly |
Asp |
| oGM1 : |
5-' GCGCTACCGcggGCCACC |
ATG |
|
AGC |
AAG |
GGC |
GAG 3' |
| pEGFP-CldKS: |
5' GCGCTACCGGTCGCCACC |
ATG |
GTG |
AGC |
AAG |
GGC |
GAG 3' |
| |
AgeI |
|
Val |
|
|
|
|
- Replacement of the 163 Valine codon by an Alanine codon in order to increase the
quantity of GFP assuming a correct conformation at 37°C (
Siemering, KR, Golbik, R, Sever, R., and Haseloff, J., Mutations that suppress the
thermosensitivity-of green fluorescent protein. Current Biol. 6 (1996) 1653-1663.)
| |
|
|
Ile |
Lys |
Ala |
Asn |
Phe |
Lys |
|
| oGM2 : |
5' |
GC |
ATC |
AAG |
Gcc |
AAC |
TTC |
AAG |
3' |
| pEGFP-CldKS |
5' |
GC |
ATC |
AAG |
GTG |
AAG |
TTC |
AAG |
3' |
| |
|
|
|
|
Val |
|
|
|
|
- Replacement a 231 Leu codon by a Histidine codon normally present in "wild-type"
GFP (
Prasher, D.C., Eckenrode, V.K, Ward, W.W., Prendergast, F.G., and Cormier, M.J., Primary
structure of the Aequorea victoria green-fluorescent protein. Gene 111 (1992) 229-233.)
| |
|
|
Ile |
Thr |
His |
Asn |
Met |
|
|
| oGM3 : |
5' |
GG |
ACT |
ATC |
CaC |
GGC |
ATG |
GA |
3' |
| pEGFP-CldKS : |
5' |
GG |
ACT |
ATC |
CTC |
GGC |
ATC |
GA |
3' |
| |
|
|
|
|
Leu |
|
|
|
|
Stage 3: pEGFPmut-Aeq (GFP-Aeguorin fusion protein)
[0083] Four PCRs (Polymerase Chain Reaction) done on a vector comprising the aequorin (Aeq)
coding phase makes it possible to amplify the A, B, C, and D fragments with, respectively,
the primers oAE5A and oAE3A, oAE5B and oAE3B, oAE5C and oAE3C, oAE5D and oAE3D. The
overlapping regions are used to assemble the different parts during successive PCRs
(
Ho, S.N., Hunt, H.D., Horton, R.M., Pullen, J.K, and Pease, L.R. Site-directed mutagenesis
by overlap extension using the polymerase chain reaction Gene 77 (1989) 51-59.) An A+B fragment is amplifies starting with a mixture of A and B fragments, and
the primers oAE5A and oAE3B. Similarly, a C+D fragment is amplified with a mixture
of C and D fragments, using the primers oAE5C and oAE3D. Finally, the complete coding
phase, A+B+C+D is developed with the primers oAE5A and oAE3D.
- Each oligonucleotide comprises one or several mismatches that are identified below
in lower case. The "wild" sequence is represented opposite, in upper case. The primer
oAE5A suppresses the original initiation translation code (ATG) and introduces a BglII site. The primer oAE3D introduces an XhoI site just behind the translation terminal codon. (TAA). The final PCR product, digested
with the BglII and XhoI enzymes, is cloned in the BglTI-SalI sites of the pEGFP-Clmut plasmid in such a way that the Valine codon (GTC), the
first codon of aequorin, is in the same reading phase as the GFP (see Figure). The
other primers introduce "silent" mutations that do not change the protein sequence
but modify six codons in the jellyfish, Aequoria victoria, to improve their expression in mammals (Wada, K-N., Aota, S.-L, Tsuchiya, R, Ishibashi, F., Gojobori, T., and Ikemura, T.
Codon usage tabulated from the GenBank genetic sequence data: Nucleic Acids Res. 18
suppl. (1990) 2367-2411.). The completeness of the entire sequence was verified by sequencing,


Stage 4: pGCA (Insertion of an Intercalated sequence)
[0084] In the pEGFPmur-Aeq plasmid, a sequence of five amino acids exists between the coding
phases of the GFP and aequorin. Observations led to the lengthening of this region
by intercalating a sequence in the
BspEL site. Two complementary oligonucleotides coding for a sequence of nine amino acids
give the composition a good deal of flexibility, owing to the abundance of Glycine
and Serine. After insertion, the
BspEI site is preserved on only one side although new intercalated sequences may be added
successively. At each stage, the orientation is controlled by the °
BspEI enzyme. Two copies of this sequence are needed to restore the normal fluorescence
of GFP, but the energy transfer between aequorin and GFP is optimal with five copies.
The entire intercalated sequence of pGCA plasmid (5 x 9 aa + the five initial amino
acids = 50 aa) was verified by sequencing:

[0085] Optimization of the energy transfer by inserting a spacer between GFP and Apoaequorin.
[0086] A non-radiative energy transfer between the excited oxyluciferin and the GFP chromophore
will be strongly dependent upon their overall geometry and their respective motions.
Therefore, a linker was designed principally composed of serine and glycine residues
to intercalate a flexibly element of variable length.
[0087] The ratio of green and blue photons emitted upon Ca
++ triggering has been measured on cellular extracts prepared 48h after transient transfection
of Neuro2A cells. The photons emitted through a beam-splitter were counted after passing
appropriate filters. Covalent linking of GFP to aequorin (GA) significantly modified
the wavelength of maximum light emission (Fig. 2), thereby demonstrating intramoiecular
energy transfer. The ratio of green over blue light (500/450nm) was further raised
from 3 to around 7 by adding 1 to 5 linkers (Fig. 2, CRET). Preliminary measurement
indicates that this ratio can reach almost 11 with SG5A probably because of the accumulation
of the fusion protein anchored to the membranes (see materials and methods).
[0088] Spectral emissions of the different constructs were also analyzed using a monochromator.
Aequorin showed a broad spectrum with maximum wavelength at 474 ± 6.9 nm and a bandwidth,
corresponding to the distance between low and high wavelengths at 50% values of the
maximum emission, at 108.3 ± 20.1 nm (Fig. 2). There was a clear shift toward the
green in the peak emission of the GFP-aequorin constructions ranging from 506.7 ±
1.2 nm to 514.1 + 3.4 nm. Increasing the length of the linker further affected the
sharpness of the spectrum, as indicated by the narrower bandwidths, 88.4 + 9.4 nm
and 56.0 ± 3.3 nm, for pGA and pG5A respectively. There was no evidence of a bimodal
spectrum with any of the pG1A-pG5A constructs indicating an optimal transfer which
could be incomplete in the case of pGA.
[0089] When the spacer between GFP and aequorin is longer than 14 amino acids, the donor
and the acceptor dipoles have probably more freedom to be in a configuration favourable
for optimum intramolecular energy transfer. The system of the invention yields an
efficiency comparable to the intermolecular CRET measured
in vivo (22, 23) and provides a convenient model for the biophysical studies of radiationless
energy transfer mechanisms.
[0090] Cellular localization and targeting of GFP-Apoaequorin.
[0091] The cellular localization of the GFP-apoaequorin constructs has been examined. Figure
3 illustrates GFP activity 48h after transient transfection in Neuro2A cells. Expression
of the mutant GFP alone (Gm) showed homogenous fluorescence in the cytosol as well
as in the nucleus as expected since GFP is a small protein that can diffuse into the
nucleus. Mutation V163A improves remarkably the fluorescence signal and reduces photobleaching
when compared to the original EGFP (data not shown) probably owing to a higher concentration
of properly folded protein. An evenly distribution is also observed for all the GFP-apoaequorin
constructions in Neuro2A cells (Fig. 3A-D) as well as in COS-7 cells. Bright spots
often appeared in the cytosol with fusion proteins having the shortest linkers: GA,
G1A and G2A. These spots were less frequent with G4A and never observed with Gm and
G5A. High concentrations of proteins expressed during transient transfections could
induce the aggregation of GFP (24), which is also going to be influenced by the presence
of the aequorin protein and the distance separating them.
[0092] The GFP-apoaequorin has also been targeted to the neurotransmitter vesicles with
a complete or a partial synaptotagmin I molecule. Synaptotagmin I is a transmembrane
protein of synaptic vesicles and is implicated in neurotransmitter exocytosis (25).
For imaging calcium microdomains in presynaptic compartments, the signal should be
more accurate than if evenly distributed in the cytoplasm of neurons. In a three part
fusion protein, SG5A (Fig. 1), the complete coding sequence of synaptotagmin I has
been put in frame upstream of G5A. In this case, GFP fluorescence is superimposable
with synaptotagmin immunostaining but is also visible at the cellular surface (Fig.
3E). In neurons (26) and in Neuro2A cells, synaptotagmin I is localized in neuronal
processes, but is undetectable in plasma membranes, probably because the dynamic mechanisms
of exocytosis are followed by rapid endocytosis. When GFP-apoaequorin is fused with
only the N-terminal part of synaptotagmin including the transmembrane domain but lacking
the cytoplasmic domain (tSG5A, Fig. 1), a strong fluorescence is restricted to the
cytosol (Fig. 3F). The punctate labeling suggests that this protein is locked into
the trans-golgi system. The correct targeting of the three part fusion molecule of
the invention does not occur with tSG5A and appears to be slowed down in the case
of SG5A. When fused to the complete synaptotagmin protein, the bioluminescent marker
is held back in the plasma membrane, but nevertheless labels all neurite outgrowths
present in Neuro2A cells.
[0093] Ca
++ detection in single cells.
[0094] Neuro2A cells were transiently transfected with pA, pGA, pG2A, pG5A or cotransfected
with pA and pGm (Fig. 1). After aequorin reconstitution with native coelenterazine
in Ca
++ - free buffer, an emission of photons has been measured with a classical intensified
CCD camera upon the addition of CaCl2 solution (5 mM) (Fig.4A.1 and 4A.4). With the
negligible background (Fig. 4A.2), integration time of 1 second is enough to record
the signal in single cells (Fig.4A.1) expressing any of the fusion proteins. No signal
could be visualized with aequorin alone or with co-expressed free GFP (data not shown).
The presence of unbound GFP does not improve aequorin chemiluminescence as we observed
in vitro. Because of the low level of light produced, aequorin expressed
in situ has never been detected in single cells except when targeted in mitochondria. With
a cooled intensified CCD camera,
Rutter et al. (1996) (27) have succeeded in detecting intramitochondrial Ca
++ signals when aequorin is fused to cytochrome c oxidate. Transgenes encoding cytoplasmic
aequorin can report calcium activities in monolayers of cells only when photomultipliers
(PMT) are used, which are more sensitive but lack the spatial resolution for single
cell analysis. The stability of GFP-aequorin fusions of the invention and the improved
light emission have made it possible to detect physiological Ca
++ signals at the level of single cells.
[0095] Calcium deficiency prior to measurements or the transfection conditions used may
induce cellular depolarization, such that opening of the voltage dependent Ca
++ channels is likely to be responsible for the fast bioluminescent response to CaCl
2, addition (Fig. 4A). Light emission would then return to background level because
of the desensitization of Ca
++ channels and the membrane depolarization by Ca
++-dependent K' channels (28). Fluo-3 showed a similar profile in mock transfections
of Neuro2A cells (Fig. 4C). Subsequent addition of a Ca
++ ionophore (A23187) induced a second emission of photons with comparable intensity
but with different kinetics. A lower light intensity is detectable in Neuro2A cells
transfected with pSG5A (Fig. 4B). When a fluorescent calcium probe is anchored to
the inner surface of the membrane, the response kinetics are much quicker than when
the probe is not targeted (29). The use of the bioluminescent reporter SG5A probably
requires a system with higher spatial and temporal resolutions. In any case, the responses
observed are not due to the complete consumption of aequorin as more bioluminescence
can still be observed when a concentrated Ca
++ solution (100mM) is applied to cells (see Fig. 4B for example). For each construction,
measurements have been repeated at least 4 times. A variability of individual cells
responses was observed, probably due to cell population heterogeneity. Further investigations
are required to calibrate relative light unit (RLU) versus Ca
++ concentrations. Patch-clamp techniques will also allow the identification of the
type of calcium channels implicated in these responses and the effect of cellular
transfection on membrane potential.
[0096] The transgenes of the invention should permit imaging of electrical activity in neural
networks in whole animals.
In vitro, two approaches were used until recently. The first method is based on the coupling
of exocytosis to emission of light from synaptolucins in nerve cells (30). Light emission
occurs when the luciferase, targeted inside the synaptic vesicles, reacts with ATP
in the extracellular space. With this system, the authors obtain signals correlated
with the neurotransmitter release but the low light level requires very long acquisition
times (over 30 sec). In the second approach, fluorescence Ca
++ sensitive markers have been used for measurements of intracellular [Ca
++] by FRET (3, 4, 31). For single cell detection, this technique requires a sufficient
concentration of probe to discriminate the signal from the background which is generated
by autofluorescence of biological compounds and the possibility of calcium-independent
energy transfer between the two GFPs. The integration times are also relatively long,
between 4 and 20 seconds.
[0097] This invention thus provides new bifunctional hybrids in which expression patterns
can be followed by GFP fluorescence while the aequorin moiety is the reporter of Ca
++ activity. Furthermore, the functional coupling of the two components, which follows
the CRET principle, results in a higher amount of light emission and a greater Ca
++ sensitivity. Bioluminescent activities of these genetic markers have been assessed
in single cells with a cooled intensified CCD camera in 1 second integration times.
The recent development of low level light detection systems should allow detection
of CRET signals with much shorter integration times and higher spatial resolution.
Intracellular and intercellular Ca
++ signaling can be approached in
vivo in transgenic animals in which the GFP-aequorin is targeted to a particular cell
population and/or to specific subcellular compartments. Particularly, calcium oscillations
can then be imaged simultaneously in cells of an integrated neural circuitry in real
time.
[0098] This invention will be described in greater detail in the following Examples.
EXAMPLE 1
Construction of GFP-aequorin fusion proteins
[0099] All the constructs were made in the pEGFP-Cl vector (Clontech). The EGFP gene is
codon-optimized for maximal expression in mammalian cells. It also contains 2 mutations
in the chromophore, F64L and S65T, which modify the excitation spectra and enhance
fluorescence intensity (17). Valine 163 of the EGFP was also substituted by alanine,
using single strand mutagenesis, to improve the proper folding of the protein and
increase the fluorescence at 371C (18, 19). The aequorin coding sequence, a generous
gift by M.-T. Nicolas, has been fused in frame at the 3' end of the EGFP gene in the
BgIII/SaII sites of pEGFP-Cl. Seven codons were modified for a better expression in
mammalian cells by means of site-directed mutagenesis using PCR (polymerase chain
reaction) with overlap extension. Then, complementary oligonucleotides, 5'-CCGGCGGGAGCGGATCCGGCGGCCAGT-3'
[SEQ ID NO: 23] and 5'-CCGGACTGGCCGCCGGATCCGCTCCCG-3' [SEQ ID NO: 24] were inserted
at the
BspEI site in the 15 bp sequence between GFP and aequorin. Conservation of the
BspEI site at only one end allowed sequential addition of one to five linker sequences
(pG1A-pG5A).
[0100] Two additional fusion constructs were made in pG5A with a synaptic protein, synaptotagmin
I of which the cDNA plasmid was generously gift by M. Fukuda. Sequences encoding for
either the entire open reading frame or the first 134 N-terminal amino acids, comprising
the transmembrane domain of the protein, were fused in frame at the 5' end of the
GFP-aequorin gene.
EXAMPLE 2
Cell Culture and transfection
[0101] Neuroblastoma cells (Neuro2A, mouse) were grown in Dulbecco's Eagle medium (Life
Technologies - Gibco, UK) supplement with 10% (V/V) heat-treated foetal calf serum,
2mm glutamine (Life Technologies - Gibco, UK) and 100 units streptomycin-penicillin
(Life Technologies - Gibco, UK). The culture were incubated at 37°C in a humidified
atmosphere containing 8% C02 and transiently transfected using either the CaPO
4, technique or the FuGENE 6
™ transfection reagent (Roche).
EXAMPLE 3
In vitro Ca++ sensitive chemiluminescence and CRET activities
[0102] Cells were harvested 48h after transfection in 250µl of 10mM β-mercaptoethanol, 4mM
EDTA, 5µM coelenterazine in PBS at 4°C during 2 to 4 hours. Cells were rinsed in 1mM
EDTA in PBS and harvested in 400µl of hypo-osmotic buffer (20mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5/ 5mM
EDTA/ 5mM β-mercaptoethanol with a protease inhibitor cocktail according to the manufacturer,
Roche), for 30min. to 1h. at 4°C. The cell membranes were broken by passing through
a 30 gauge needle and the cellular extract was obtained after microcentrifugation
at 13000 rpm for 1h at 40C. The supernatant was harvested for all constructions but
SGSA for which the membrane pellet was further resuspended. Calcium sensitivity chemiluminescent
activity was measured in a luminometer (Lumat LB95501 E&EG Berthold). Aliquots (10µl)
were placed in sample tube (with 90µl of 10mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5) in the luminometer
and the light intensity expressed in relative light unit (R.L.U.) was measured after
the injection of 100µl of 50mM CaCl
2/10mM Tris-HCl pH 7.5 solution.
[0103] For CRET measurements, aliquots of extracts from transfected cells were placed in
a reservoir chamber and brought into contact with an optic fibre bundle attached to
a photon counting camera (Photek three-microchannel plate intensified CCD camera:
Photek 216). Before capture of signals, light passes through a monochromator allowing
the spectral analysis of emitted photons. The acquisition begins 20 seconds before
injection of CaCl
2 and carries on during 40 seconds after injection of the CaCl
2 solution (50mM). For green/blue photons ratio determinations, the same procedure
was followed but in this case the system measures the light emitted through blue (450nm)
and green (500nm) filters after a beam splitter.
EXAMPLE 4
GFP fluorescence and immunolocalization
[0104] Neuro2A cells were fixed 48h after transfection in 4% paraformaldehyde in PBS pH
7.4, rinsed in PBS, and mounted. GFP fluorescence is visualized under a confocal Laser
Scanning microscope (Zeiss, Heidelberg, Germany) which uses an argon-krypton laser
operating in multi-line mode or an Axiophot microscope with an epiluminescent system
(Zeiss, Heidelberg, Germany). For immunolocalisation of the targeted GFP-aequorin,
fixed cells were pre-treated with 50mM NH
4Cl in PBS pH 7.4 for 5 min. at room temperature, permeabilised in 2% BSA/ 0.02% Triton/goat
serum solution in PBS during 1h. Antibodies against synaptotagmin (StressGen SYA-130)
were then applied during 2-4 hrs. Cells were then rinsed in PBS and incubated in 2%
BSA/ 0.02% Triton in PBS with secondary antibody diluted at 1/100 (TRITC conjugated
antibody). Cells were then washed in PBS and mounted.
EXAMPLE 5
Single cells bioluminescence detection
[0105] Forty-eight hours after transfection, cells were rinsed in 124mM NaCl/ 5mM KCl/ 15mM
Hepes pH 7.4/ 5mM NaHCO
3/ 1mM NaH
2PO
4/ 0.5mM MgSO
4/ 1. 5mM CaCl
2 / 5.5 mM Glucose and later incubated in the same buffer without CaCl
2 with 5µM coelenterazine to reconstituted aequorin, for 2 to 4h at 37°C and then rinsed.
Calcium signals were visualized with a modified Olympus upright microscope (BHS) fitted
with an BH2-RFCA epifluorescence unit recorded through a plan x40 Olympus long working
distance water-immersion.lens (N.A. 0.7). GFP Fluorescence allowed to choose the recording
area on transfected cells. The excitation lamp was shut off and the gain of the camera
increased. Images were integrated every second with a cooled Photonic Science extended
ISIS video camera. Each profile in Figure 4 represents the amount of light emitted
over the area that we defined around the soma of individual cells using the Axon Imaging
Workbench 2214 software. Intensities of fluorescence and CRET activity are translated
in scaled pseudocolors. Controls were made with Fluo-3 AM on mock-transfected Neuro2A
cells to check the experimental conditions.
EXAMPLE 6
Protein stability
[0106] The turnover times of the different cytosolic proteins were estimated on transient
expression in COS7 cells by treatment with puromycin (50µg/ml) for 6h. Ca
2+-induced chemiluminescence activities were performed on cellular extract obtained
after the reconstitution of aequorin in presence of 5µM coelenterazine. Calcium sensitivity
chemiluminescence activity was measured in a luminometer (Lumat LB95501 E&EG Berthold).
Aliquots (10µl) were placed in a sample tube (with 90µl of 10mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5)
in the luminometer and the light intensity expressed, in relative light units (RLUs),
was measured after the injection of 100µl of 50mM CaCl
2/10mM Tris-Hcl pH 7.5 solution. Relative chemiluminescence activities are expressed
as a percentage of the activity at the time zero (100%). The results are shown in
Fig. 5. As seen in Fig. 5, over this period, most fusion proteins presented 30% decrease
or activity compared with the 80% loss of apoaequorin when alone.
EXAMPLE 7
Determination of the Ca++ affinity of aequorin and G5A
[0107] Ca
2+ induced chemiluminescence activities were performed on cellular extract obtained
after the reconstitution of aequorin in presence of 5µM coelenterazine. Calcium sensitivity
chemiluminescence activity was measured in a luminometer (Lumat LP95501 E&EG Berthold).
Aliquots (10µl) were placed in a sample tube (with 90µl of 10mM Trio-HCl, pH 7.5)
in the luminometer and the light intensity expressed, in relative light units (RLUs),
was measured after the injection of 100µl of different Ca/EGTA solutions. The results
are shown in Fig. 6. As seen in Fig. 6, G5A gives a significant signal over background
with Ca
2+ concentrations as low as 38 nM, whereas aequorin needs 28 times more calcium (1 M)
to yield a comparable signal.
For Chimeric GFP-aequorin as bioluminescent Ca2+ reporters at the single cell level
[0108] Concerning the invention of chimeric GFP-aequorin calcium sensitive bioluminescent
reporters, new applications have been developed and some preliminary datas have been
obtained about sensitivity of GFP-aequorin proteins to Ca
2+ ions.
EXAMPLE 8
Ca2+ sensitivity of G5A and SG5A: Calibration curves between bioluminescent signals and
Ca2+ concentrations
[0109] Measurements of Ca
2+ sensitivity of two constructs G5A and SGSA were performed on cellular extracts obtained
after the reconstitution of aequorin in presence of 5µM colenterazine. Calcium chemiluminescence
activity was measured in a luminometer (Lumat LB95501 E&EG Berthold). Aliquots (10µl)
were placed in a sample tube with 90 µl of 10mM Tris.HCl pH 7.5 in the luminometer
and the light intensity expressed, in relative light units (RLUs), was measured after
the injection of 100ml of different Ca/EGTA solutions (Molecular Probes Calcium Calibration
Buffer Kit). Figure 7 shows the Ca
2+ response curve of G5A, SG5A and aequorin. The curves represent the relationship between
the ratio L/Lmax and [Ca2+]. L is the rate of RLUs at any given [Ca2+] and Lmax is
the rate of RLUs at saturating [Ca2+]. These results show a much higher affinity for
Ca
2+ of the various forms of GFP-aequorin than aequorin.
EXAMPLE 9
New applications of GFP-aequorin reporters
[0110] Adenoviral vectors with GFP-aequorin were developed Using these new constructs, dissociated
neurons from rat spinal cord in culture can be transfected with higher efficiency.
Figures 8 and 9 depict C
2+-induced bioluminescent signals detected at the single cell level in dissociated neuronal
cells. Neuronal cells infected by adenoviral vectors with G5A (Fig. 8) or SG5A (Fig.
9) were pre-incubated with 5µM coelenterazine in a Ca
2+-free buffer. Intensities of fluorescence and bioluminescence activity are translated
in pseudocolors. Representative pictures of the chosen fields are shown after the
addition of 5mM and 2.5mM of CaCl
2, respectively, for Figures 8a-c & 9a at 12 and 9 seconds. Figures 8d-e and 9b were
obtained after addition of ionomycin and high concentration of CaCl
2 (100mM).
EXAMPLE 10
Expression of GFP-aequorin reporters in vivo in Xenopus embryos and measurement of calcium activities
[0111] Calcium signalling during early and late embryogenesis in
Xenopus was studied Figure 10 shows representative pattern of luminescence activity illustrating
the changes in intracellular calcium during the neural induction after the injection
of the GA plasmid at the one cell stage in
Xenopus embryo. Figure 11 shows a transgenic
Xenopus larva with GFP-aequorin. These techniques can also be employed with zebrafish and
mouse transgenics. These results show that these calcium reporters can be used in
a great variety of organisms or tissues to visualize calcium activity and to measure
calcium concentrations.
[0112] In summary, the new linker useful for energy transfer by CRET system in a bioluminescent
system has the following properties:
Forms:
[0113] Different amino acid sequences and peptide sequences of the linker are described.
Its length comprises a minimal size of 4 to 9 amino acids, which can be extended by
a group of 7 to 12 amino acids (in a preferred embodiment 9 amino acids). The said
group is extendable to 63 amino acids, i.e., 9 x 6 times. The experiment was done,
for example, with a peptide linker comprising 5 amino acids followed by 1 to 5 times
of 9 amino acids.
Functions:
[0114] Its first function is to approach donor sites and acceptor sites of two molecules
for a direct transmission of energy. This linker confers an optimal environment for
energy transmission by CRET.
[0115] The second function is the stabilization of the described system by increasing the
half life of aequorin because of the fusion of GFP. The aequorin is linked to the
GFP, which has a half life of more than 24 hours.
Applications:
[0116] In a bioluminescent system, aptitude for protein-protein interaction.
[0117] Application of the bioluminescent system with the linker: epileptogenesis, SNC disease
(visualization of the neuronal cell activities during development and in the adult),
neuromuscular connection with the implication of homeogene HOX-C8 in the spinal cord.
[0118] Application in apoptosis with a chimeric protein comprising the linker according
to the invention by the visualization of the modifications of the intracellular calcium
pools.
[0119] Visualization and precision of the role of calcium waves in living organs like the
spleen (intra and intercellular calcium waves).
Results:
[0120] Chimeric protein is more stable by augmentation of the half-life of the molecule.
Augmentation of the sensitivity for calcium ions is important
[0121] The linker of the invention has surprising properties. The sensitivity of calcium
ions of the chimeric molecule containing the aequorin and the linker is different
from that for aequorin alone. The invention provides a better sensitivity.
[0123] It is the first time that one can obtain visualization of aequorin signal in a live
single cell system (or in an alive animal).
[0124] In summary, monitoring calcium fluxes in real time could help to understand the development,
the plasticity and the functioning of the central nervous system. In jellyfish, the
chemiluminescent calcium binding aequorin protein is associated with the green fluorescent
protein (GFP) and a green bioluminescent signal is emitted upon Ca
++ stimulation. We decided to use this Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET)
between the two molecules. Calcium sensitive bioluminescent reporter genes have been
constructed by fusing GFP and aequorin resulting in much more light being emitted.
Chemiluminescent and fluorescent activities of these fusion proteins have been assessed
in mammalian cells. Cystosolic Ca
++ increases were imaged at the single cell level with a cooled intensified CCD camera.
This bifunctional reporter gene should allow the investigation of calcium activities
in neuronal networks and in specific subcellular compartments in transgenic animals.
[0125] Following are sequences and the corresponding sequence identifiers referred to herein:
Peptide sequences:
GA
[0126] 
G1A
[0127]

G2A
[0128] 
G4A
[0129] 
G5A
[0130] 
SeG5A
[0131]

GA
[0132] 
G1A
[0133]

G2A
[0134] 
G4A
[0135] 
G5A
[0136]

SeG5A
[0137]

DNA sequence of GFP-aeguorin linkers
Peptide sequence of linkers
[0139]
| pGA |
Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 18] |
| Pgla |
Ser Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 19] |
| pG2A |
 |
| pG4A |
 |
| pG5A |
 |
| pSeG5A and pStGSA idem than pG5A. |
REFERENCES
[0140] The following publications have been cited herein.
- 1. Berridge, M.J. (1998) Neuron 21. 13-26.
- 2. Cobbold, P. H., & Rink, T. J. (1987) Biochem. J. 248, 313-323.
- 3. Miyawaki, A., Griesbeck, O., Heim, R., & Tsien, R.Y. (1999) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci.
USA 96,2135-2140.
- 4. Romoser, V. A., Hinkle, P. M., & Persechini, A. (1997) J. Biol. Chem. 272, 13270-13274.
- 5. Inui, S., Noguchi, M., Sack, Y., Takagi, Y., Miyata, T., Awing, S., Miyata, T, & Tsuji,
F. I. (1985) Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA 82, 3154-3158.
- 6. Prasher, D., McCann, R. 0., & Cormier, M. J. (1985) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm.
126, 1259-1268.
- 7. Tsuji, F.I., Inouye, S., Goto, T., & Sakaki, Y. (1986) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
83, 8107-8111.
- 8. Shimomura, 0., & Johnson, F. H. (1978) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 75, 2611-2615.
- 9. Sala-Newby, G. B., Badminton, M. N., Evans, W. H., Georges, C. H., Jones, H. E., Kendal,
J. M., Ribeiro, A.R., & Campbell, A. K. (2000) Methods Enzymol. 305, 479-498.
- 10. Shimomura, O., Johnson, F. H., & Saiga, Y. (1962) J. Cell Comp. Physiol. 59, 223-239.
- 11. Johnson, F. H., Shimomura, 0., Saiga, Y., Gershman, L. C., Reynolds, G.T., & Waters,
J. R. (1962) J. Cell Comp. Physiol 60, 85-103.
- 12. Cubitt, A. B., Heim, R., Adams, S. R., Boyd, A. E., Gross, L. A., & Tsien, R. Y.
(1995) Trends Biochem. Sci., 20, 448-455.
- 13. Ward, W. W., & Cormier, M. J. (1976) J. Phys. Chem. 80, 2289-2291.
- 14. Ward, W. W.1 & Cormier, M. J. (1978) Photochem. Photobiol. 27, 389-396.
- 15. Morise, H., Shimomura, O., Johnson, F. H., & WinNT, J. (1974) Biochemistry 13, 2656-2662.
- 16. Campbell, A. K. (1988) in Chemiluminescence, Principles and Application in Biology
and Medecin, eds.Ellis Horwood Ltd. (Chichester), pp 474-534.
- 17. Cormack, B. P., Valdivia, R.H., & Falkow, S. (1996) Gene 173, 33-38.
- 18. Crameri, A., Whitehom, E.A., Tate, E., Stemmer, W.P.C. (1996) Nature Biotech. 14,
315-319.
- 19. Siemering, K. R., Golbik, R., Sever, R., & Haseloff, J. (1996) Curr. Biol. 6, 1653-1663.
- 20. Watkins, N. J., & Campbell, A. K. (1993) Biochem. J., 293, 181-185.
- 21. Badminton, M. N., Sala-Newby, G. B., Kendall, J. M., & Campbell, A. K. (1995) Biochem.
Biophys. Res. Comm. 217, 950-957.
- 22. Morin, J. G., & Hastings, J. W. (1970) J. Cell. Physiol. 77, 313-318.
- 23. Campbell, A. K., & Hallett, M. B. (1978) Proc. Physiol. Soc., 287, 4-5.
- 24. Yang, F., Moss, L. G., & Phillips, Jr., G. N. (1996) Nature Biotech. 14, 1246-1251.
- 25. Brose, N., Petrenko, A. G., Sladhof, T, C., & Jahn, R. (1992) Science 256, 1021-1025.
- 26. Coco, S., Verderio, C., De Camilli, P., & Matteoli, M. (1998) J. Neurochem. 71, 1987-1992.
- 27. Rutter, G. A., Burnett, P., Rizzuto, R., Brini, M., Murgia, M., Pozzan, T., Tavaré
J. M., & Dcnton, R. M. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 93, 5489-5494.
- 28. Sah, P. (1996) Trends Neurosci. 19, 150-154.
- 29. Etter, E.F., Minta, A., Poenie, M., & Fay, F. S. (1996) Proc. Natl. Acad Sci. USA
93, 5368-5373.
- 30. Miesenböck, G., & Rothman, J. E. (1997) Prod. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 94, 3402-3407.
- 31. Miyawaki, A., Llopis, J., Heim, R., McCaffery, J. M., Adams, J. A., Ikura, M., & Tsien,
R. Y, (1997) Nature 388, 882-887.
SEQUENCE LISTING
[0141]
<110> INSTITUT PASTEUR
CENTRE NATIONAL DE LA RECHERCHE SCIENTIFIQUE
<120> CHIMERIC GFP-AEQUORIN AS BIOLUMINESCENT Ca++ REPORTERS AT THE SINGLE CELL LEVEL
<130> B4892-AD/CAL
<140> PCT/EP 01/07057
<141> 2001-06-01
<150> US 60/208,314
<151> 2000-06-01
<150> US 60/210,526
<151> 2000-06-06
<150> US 60/255,111
<151> 2000-12-14
<160> 48
<170> PatentIn Ver. 2.1
<210> 1
<211> 432
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 1


<210> 2
<211> 441
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 2


<210> 3
<211> 450
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 3


<210> 4
<211> 468
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 4


<210> 5
<211> 477
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 5



<210> 6
<211> 906
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 6




<210> 7
<211> 3973
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 7


<210> 8
<211> 2673
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 8


<210> 9
<211> 1350
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 9

<210> 10
<211> 1404
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 10


<210> 11
<211> 1431
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 11

<210> 12
<211> 2718
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 12


<210> 13
<211> 15
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: DNA sequence of GFP-aequorin linker
<400> 13
tccggcctca gatct 15
<210> 14
<211> 42
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: DNA sequence of GFP-aequorin linker
<400> 14
tccggcggga gcggatccgg cggccagtcc ggcctcagat ct 42
<210> 15
<211> 69
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: DNA sequence of GFP-aequorin linker
<400> 15

<210> 16
<211> 123
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: DNA sequence of GFP-aequorin linker
<400> 16

<210> 17
<211> 150
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: DNA sequence of GFP-Aequorin linker
<400> 17

<210> 18
<211> 5
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Peptide sequence of linker
<400> 18

<210> 19
<211> 14
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Peptide sequence of linker
<400> 19

<210> 20
<211> 23
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Peptide sequence of linker
<400> 20

<210> 21
<211> 41
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Peptide sequence of linker
<400> 21

<210> 22
<211> 50
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Peptide sequence of linker
<400> 22

<210> 23
<211> 27
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic oligonucleotide
<400> 23
ccggcgggag cggatccggc ggccagt 27
<210> 24
<211> 27
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic oligonucleotide
<400> 24
ccggactggc cgccggatcc gctcccg 27
<210> 25
<211> 135
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Linker
<400> 25


<210> 26
<211> 5
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Linker
<400> 26

<210> 27
<211> 27
<212> DNA
<213> Unknown Organism
<220>
<223> Description of Unknown Organism: pEGFP-Cl plasmid
<400> 27
gtcgacggta ccgcgggccc gggatcc 27
<210> 28
<211> 14
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Illustrative nucleic acid
<400> 28
gtcgacgggg atcc 14
<210> 29
<211> 33
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (19) .. (33)
<400> 29

<210> 30
<211> 5
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 30

<210> 31
<211> 36
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (19)..(36)
<400> 31

<210> 32
<211> 6
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 32

<210> 33
<211> 20
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (3) .. (20)
<400> 33

<210> 34
<211> 6
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: synthetic construct
<400> 34

<210> 35
<211> 20
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (3) .. (20)
<400> 35

<210> 36
<211> 6
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 36

<210> 37
<211> 19 .
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (3)..(17)
<400> 37

<210> 38
<211> 5
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 38

<210> 39
<211> 19
<212> DNA
<213> Aequorea victoria
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (3)..(17)
<400> 39

<210> 40
<211> 5
<212> PRT
<213> Aequorea victoria
<400> 40

<210> 41
<211> 596
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Altered Aequoria victoria sequence
<400> 41

<210> 42
<211> 21
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<220>
<221> CDS
<222> (1) .. (21)
<400> 42

<210> 43
<211> 7
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 43

<210> 44
<211> 21
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 44
gacagatctg agtccggact t 21
<210> 45
<211> 21
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 45
aagtgcggac tcagatctgt c 21
<210> 46
<211> 27
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 46
ccggcgggag cggatccggc ggccagt 27
<210> 47
<211> 9
<212> PRT
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 47

<210> 48
<211> 27
<212> DNA
<213> Artificial Sequence
<220>
<223> Description of Artificial Sequence: Synthetic construct
<400> 48
ccggactggc cgccggatcc gctcccg 27
1. A fusion protein comprising:
(a) a fluorescent molecule,
(b) an photoprotein that is sensitive to calcium, and
(c) a linker between a) and b) enabling the energy transmission by CRET (Chemiluminescence
Resonance Energy Transfer) between the fluorescent molecule and the photoprotein that
is sensible to calcium.
2. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 1.
3. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 2.
4. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 3.
5. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 4.
6. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 5.
7. A purified polypeptide having the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID NO: 6.
8. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 7.
9. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 8.
10. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 9.
11. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 10.
12. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 11.
13. A purified polynucleotide having the sequence of SEQ ID NO: 12.
14. A polynucleotide linker having the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No: 13.
15. A polynucleotide linker having the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No: 14.
16. A polynucleotide linker having the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No: 15.
17. A polynucleotide linker having the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No: 16.
18. A polynucleotide linker having the polynucleotide sequence of SEQ ID No: 17.
19. A polynucleotide linker according to any one of claims 14 to 18 having the function
after translation to approach a donor site to an acceptor site in optimal conditions
to permit a direct transfer of energy by Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer
(CRET) in a purified polypeptide according to claim 1.
20. A peptidic linker of at least 5 amino acids and comprising the amino acid sequence
of SEQ ID No: 18.
21. A peptidic linker comprising the amino acid sequence of SEMI ID No: 19.
22. A peptidic linker comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID No: 20.
23. A peptidic linker comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID No: 21.
24. A peptidic linker comprising the amino acid sequence of SEQ ID No: 22.
25. A peptide linker having the function to approach a donor site to an acceptor site
in optimal conditions to permit a direct transfer of energy by chemiluminescence in
a purified polypeptide according to claims 2 to 7.
26. A peptide linker according to any one of claims 20 to 25, having the function to approach
a donor site to an acceptor site in optimal conditions to permit a direct transfer
of energy in the presence of a purified polypeptide according to claim 1.
27. A peptide linker according to any one of claims 20 to 26, which has the capacity to
stabilize a modified bioluminescent system in vivo and/or in vitro.
28. A modified bioluminescent system comprising two bioluminescent proteins and a peptide
linker according to any one of claims 20 to 27.
29. A modified bioluminescent system according to claim 28, wherein said two bioluminescent
proteins comprise at least an aequorin protein.
30. A modified bioluminescent system according to claims 28 or 29 comprising the following
constituents : aequorin protein and a GFP protein.
31. A kit for measuring the transfer of energy in vivo or in vitro and containing at least one of the polypeptides according to claims 2 to 7 or the
polynucleotide according to claims 8 to 13 and the reagents necessary for visualizing
or detecting the said transfer in presence or in absence of a molecule of interest.
32. A fusion protein according to claim 1 of the formula:
GFP - LINKER - AEQ;
wherein GFP is green fluorescent protein;
AEQ is aequorin; and
LINKER is a polypeptide of 4-63 amino acids.
33. The fusion protein as claimed in claim 32, wherein the linker comprises 14-50 amino
acids.
34. The fusion protein as claimed in claims 32 and 33, wherein the linker comprises the
following amino acids:
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO: 251])n, wherein n is 1-5.
35. The fusion protein as claimed in claim 34, wherein n is 1.
36. The fusion protein as claimed in claim 34, wherein n is 5.
37. A fusion protein for energy transfer from aequorin to green fluorescent protein by
Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer (CRET) following activation of the aequorin
in the presence of Ca
++, wherein the fusion protein has the formula:
GFP - LINKER - AEQ; wherein
GFP is green fluorescent protein;
AEQ is aequorin; and
LINKER comprises the following amino acids:
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO: 25])n, wherein n is 1-5; and
wherein the fusion protein has an affinity for Ca
++ ions and a half-life of at least 24 hours.
38. A fusion protein as claimed in claims 32 to 37, wherein the linker includes the amino
acid sequence Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 26].
39. A fusion protein as claimed in claims 32 to 38, which further comprises a peptide
signal sequence for targeting the fusion protein to a cell or to a subcellular compartment.
40. A polynucleotide encoding a fusion protein as claimed in any one of claims 32 to 39.
41. A composition comprising a fusion peptide according to claim 1 or a purified polypeptide
according to any one of claims 2 to 7, or a modified bioluminescent system according
to claims 28 to 30, or a fusion protein according to any one of claims 32 to 39.
42. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2507.
43. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2508.
44. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2509.
45. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2514.
46. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2511.
47. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. I-2512.
48. A culture as deposited at the C.N.C.M. and containing the plasmid No. 1-2513.
49. A method of screening
in vitro a change in a physical, chemical, biochemical, or biological condition, wherein the
method comprises:
(a) adding into a reaction system a composition according to claim 41 containing an
analyte of interest in presence or in absence of a molecule of interest to be tested;
and
(b) visualising the emission of energy produced in step (a).
50. A method of screening
in vitro a molecule capable of modulating the energy in a composition according to claim 41,
wherein the method comprises:
(a) providing in a biological sample a composition according to claim 41 in a reaction
system containing the molecule to be tested;
(b) detecting a modulation of the energy by comparison with a control sample containing
said composition according to claim 41 without the molecule to be tested; and
(c) optionally, determining the effective minimal concentration of said molecule capable
of inhibiting or increasing the energy transfer of said composition.
1. Fusionsprotein umfassend:
(a) ein fluoreszierendes Molekül,
(b) ein Photoprotein, das auf Calcium empfindlich ist, und
(c) einen Linker zwischen a) und b), der eine Energieübertragung durch CRET (Chemilumineszenz-Resonanz-Energietransfer)
zwischen dem fluoreszierenden Molekül und dem auf Calcium empfindlichen Photoprotein
ermöglicht.
2. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 1.
3. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 2.
4. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 3.
5. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 4.
6. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 5.
7. Gereinigtes Polypeptid mit der Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 6.
8. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 7.
9. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 8.
10. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 9.
11. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 10.
12. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 11.
13. Gereinigtes Polynukleotid mit der Sequenz von SEQ ID NO: 12.
14. Polynukleotidlinker mit der Polynukleotidsequenz von SEQ ID NO: 13.
15. Polynukleotidlinker mit der Polynukleotidsequenz von SEQ ID NO: 14.
16. Polynukleotidlinker mit der Polynukleotidsequenz von SEQ ID NO: 15.
17. Polynukleotidlinker mit der Polynukleotidsequenz von SEQ ID NO: 16.
18. Polynukleotidlinker mit der Polynukleotidsequenz von SEQ ID NO: 17.
19. Polynukleotidlinker nach einem der Ansprüche 14 bis 18 mit der Funktion, nach Translation
eine Donorstelle an eine Akzeptorstelle unter optimalen Bedingungen so anzunähern,
dass eine direkte Übertragung von Energie durch Chemilumineszenz-Resonanz-Energietransfer
(CRET) in einem gereinigten Polypeptid nach Anspruch 1 möglich ist.
20. Peptidlinker mit mindestens 5 Aminosäuren und umfassend die Aminosäuresequenz von
SEQ ID NO: 18.
21. Peptidlinker umfassend die Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 19.
22. Peptidlinker umfassend die Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 20.
23. Peptidlinker umfassend die Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 21.
24. Peptidlinker umfassend die Aminosäuresequenz von SEQ ID NO: 22.
25. Peptidlinker mit der Funktion, eine Donorstelle an eine Akzeptorstelle unter optimalen
Bedingungen so anzunähern, dass eine direkte Übertragung von Energie durch Chemilumineszenz
in einem gereinigten Polypeptid nach Anspruch 2 bis 7 möglich ist.
26. Peptidlinker nach einem der Ansprüche 20 bis 25, mit der Funktion, eine Donorstelle
an eine Akzeptorstelle unter optimalen Bedingungen so anzunähern, dass eine direkte
Übertragung von Energie in Gegenwart eines gereinigten Polypeptids nach Anspruch 1
möglich ist.
27. Peptidlinker nach einem der Ansprüche 20 bis 26, der die Fähigkeit zum Stabilisieren
eines modifizierten biolumineszenten Systems in vivo und/oder in vitro aufweist.
28. Modifiziertes biolumineszentes System umfassend zwei biolumineszente Proteine und
einen Peptidlinker nach einem der Ansprüche 20 bis 27.
29. Modifiziertes biolumineszentes System nach Anspruch 28, worin die beiden biolumineszenten
Proteine mindestens ein Aequorinprotein umfassen.
30. Modifiziertes biolumineszentes System nach Anspruch 28 oder 29 umfassend die folgenden
Elemente: Aequorinprotein und ein GFP-Protein.
31. Kit zum Messen der Energieübertragung in vivo oder in vitro, und das mindestens eines der Polypeptide nach Anspruch 2 bis 7 oder das Polynukleotid
nach Anspruch 8 bis 13 und die notwendigen Reagenzien zum Visualisieren oder Detektieren
des Übergangs in Gegenwart oder Abwesenheit eines interessierenden Moleküls enthält.
32. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 1 mit der Formel:
GFP-LINKER-AEQ,
wobei GFP ein grün fluoreszierendes Protein ist,
AEQ Aequorin ist und
LINKER ein Polypeptid mit 4-63 Aminosäuren ist.
33. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 32, wobei der Linker 14-50 Aminosäuren umfasst.
34. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 32 und 33, wobei der Linker die folgenden Aminosäuren
umfasst:
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO:25])n, wobei n gleich 1 bis 5 ist.
35. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 34, wobei n gleich 1 ist.
36. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 34, wobei n gleich 5 ist.
37. Fusionsprotein zur Energieübertragung von Aequorin zu grün fluoreszierendem Protein
durch Chemilumineszenz-Resonanz-Energietransfer (CRET) nach Aktivierung des Aequorins
in Gegenwart von Ca
++, wobei das Fusionsprotein die Formel aufweist:
GFP-LINKER-AEQ, wobei
GFP ein grün fluoreszierendes Protein ist,
AEQ Aequorin ist und
LINKER die folgenden Aminosäuren umfasst:
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID NO: 25])n, wobei n gleich 1 bis 5 ist, und
wobei das Fusionsprotein eine Affinität für Ca++-Ionen und eine Halbwertszeit von mindestens 24 Stunden aufweist.
38. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 32 bis 37, wobei der Linker die Aminosäuresequenz Ser
Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID NO: 26] beinhaltet.
39. Fusionsprotein nach Anspruch 32 bis 38, das ferner eine Peptidsignalsequenz zum Targeting
des Fusionsproteins auf eine Zelle oder ein subzelluläres Kompartiment umfasst.
40. Polynukleotid, das für ein Fusionsprotein kodiert, wie es in einem der Ansprüche 32
bis 39 beansprucht ist.
41. Zusammensetzung umfassend ein Fusionspeptid nach Anspruch 1, oder ein gereinigtes
Polypeptid nach einem der Ansprüche 2 bis 7, oder ein modifiziertes biolumineszentes
System nach Anspruch 28 bis 30, oder ein Fusionsprotein nach einem der Ansprüche 32
bis 39.
42. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2507 enthält.
43. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2508 enthält.
44. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2509 enthält.
45. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2510 enthält.
46. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2511 enthält.
47. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2512 enthält.
48. Kultur wie bei der C.N.C.M. hinterlegt, und die das Plasmid Nr. I-2513 enthält.
49. Verfahren zum
in vitro Screening einer Veränderung in einem physikalischen, chemischen, biochemischen oder
biologischen Zustand, wobei das Verfahren umfasst:
(a) Zugeben einer Zusammensetzung nach Anspruch 41 zu einem Reaktionssystem, das einen
interessierenden Analyt enthält, in Gegenwart oder Abwesenheit eines zu prüfenden
interessierenden Moleküls, und
(b) Visualisieren der Emission von in Schritt (a) produzierter Energie.
50. Verfahren zum
in vitro Screening eines Moleküls, das in der Lage ist, die Energie in einer Zusammensetzung
nach Anspruch 41 zu modulieren, wobei das Verfahren umfasst:
(a) Bereitstellen einer Zusammensetzung nach Anspruch 41 in einer biologischen Probe
in einem Reaktionssystem, das das zu prüfende Molekül enthält,
(b) Detektieren einer Modulation der Energie durch Vergleich mit einer Kontrollprobe,
die die Zusammensetzung nach Anspruch 41 ohne das zu prüfende Molekül enthält, und
(c) optional Bestimmen der effektiven minimalen Konzentration des Moleküls, das in
der Lage ist, die Energieübertragung der Zusammensetzung zu inhibieren oder zu erhöhen.
1. Protéine de fusion comprenant :
(a) une molécule fluorescente,
(b) une photoprotéine qui est sensible au calcium, et
(c) un lieur entre a) et b) permettant la transmission de l'énergie par CRET (transfert
d'énergie de résonance de chimioluminescence [Chemiluminescence Resonance Energy Transfer]) entre la molécule fluorescente et la photoprotéine qui est sensible au calcium.
2. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 1.
3. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 2.
4. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 3.
5. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 4.
6. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 5.
7. Polypeptide purifié possédant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 6.
8. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 7.
9. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 8.
10. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 9.
11. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 10.
12. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 11.
13. Polynucléotide purifié possédant la séquence de SEQ ID No : 12.
14. Lieur de polynucléotide possédant la séquence polynucléotidique de SEQ ID No : 13.
15. Lieur de polynucléotide possédant la séquence polynucléotidique de SEQ ID No : 14.
16. Lieur de polynucléotide possédant la séquence polynucléotidique de SEQ ID No : 15.
17. Lieur de polynucléotide possédant la séquence polynucléotidique de SEQ ID No : 16.
18. Lieur de polynucléotide possédant la séquence polynucléotidique de SEQ ID No : 17.
19. Lieur de polynucléotide selon l'une quelconque des revendications 14 à 18, ayant la
fonction après traduction d'approcher un site donneur d'un site accepteur dans des
conditions optimales afin de permettre un transfert direct d'énergie par transfert
d'énergie de résonance de chimioluminescence (CRET) dans un polypeptide purifié selon
la revendication 1.
20. Lieur peptidique d'au moins 5 acides aminés et comprenant la séquence d'acides aminés
de SEQ ID No : 18.
21. Lieur peptidique comprenant la séquence d'acide aminés de SEQ ID No : 19.
22. Lieur peptidique comprenant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 20.
23. Lieur peptidique comprenant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 21.
24. Lieur peptidique comprenant la séquence d'acides aminés de SEQ ID No : 22.
25. Lieur de peptide ayant la fonction d'approcher un site donneur d'un site accepteur
dans des conditions optimales afin de permettre un transfert direct d'énergie par
chimioluminescence dans un polypeptide purifié selon les revendications 2 à 7.
26. Lieur de peptide selon l'une quelconque des revendications 20 à 25, ayant la fonction
d'approcher un site donneur d'un site accepteur dans des conditions optimales afin
de permettre un transfert direct d'énergie en présence d'un polypeptide purifié selon
la revendication 1.
27. Lieur de peptide selon l'une quelconque des revendications 20 à 26, qui a la capacité
de stabiliser un système bioluminescent modifié in vivo et/ou in vitro.
28. Système bioluminescent modifié comprenant deux protéines bioluminescentes et un lieur
de peptide selon l'une quelconque des revendications 20 à 27.
29. Système bioluminescent modifié selon la revendication 28, dans lequel lesdites deux
protéines bioluminescentes comprennent au moins une protéine équorine.
30. Système bioluminescent modifié selon les revendications 28 ou 29, comprenant les constituants
suivants : une protéine équorine et une protéine GFP.
31. Kit destiné à mesurer le transfert d'énergie in vivo ou in vitro et contenant au moins l'un des polypeptides selon les revendications 2 à 7 ou le
polynucléotide selon les revendications 8 à 13 et les réactifs nécessaires pour visualiser
ou détecter ledit transfert en présence ou en l'absence d'une molécule d'intérêt.
32. Protéine de fusion selon la revendication 1 de formule :
GFP - LIEUR - AEQ ;
dans laquelle GFP est une protéine fluorescente verte ;
AEQ est l'équorine ; et
LIEUR est un polypeptide de 4 à 63 acides aminés.
33. Protéine de fusion selon la revendication 32, dans laquelle le lieur comprend 14 à
50 acides aminés.
34. Protéine de fusion selon les revendications 32 et 33, dans laquelle le lieur comprend
les acides aminés suivantes :
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID No : 251])n, où n vaut de 1 à 5.
35. Protéine de fusion selon la revendication 34, dans laquelle n vaut 1.
36. Protéine de fusion selon la revendication 34, dans laquelle n vaut 5.
37. Protéine de fusion pour transfert d'énergie de l'équorine à la protéine fluorescente
verte par transfert d'énergie de résonance de chimioluminescence (CRET) à la suite
d'une activation de l'équorine en présence de Ca
++, dans laquelle la protéine de fusion possède la formule :
GFP - LIEUR - AEQ ; dans laquelle
GFP est une protéine fluorescente verte ;
AEQ est l'équorine ; et
LIEUR comprend les acides aminés suivants :
(Gly Gly Ser Gly Ser Gly Gly Gln Ser [SEQ ID No : 25])n, où n vaut de 1 à 5 ; et
dans laquelle la protéine de fusion possède une affinité pour des ions Ca
++ et une demi-vie d'au moins 24 heures.
38. Protéine de fusion selon les revendications 32 à 37, dans laquelle le lieur inclut
la séquence d'acides aminés Ser Gly Leu Arg Ser [SEQ ID No : 26].
39. Protéine de fusion selon les revendications 32 à 38, qui comprend de plus une séquence
signal peptidique pour que la protéine de fusion cible une cellule ou un compartiment
subcellulaire.
40. Polynucléotide codant pour une protéine de fusion selon l'une quelconque des revendications
32 à 39.
41. Composition comprenant un peptide de fusion selon la revendication 1 ou un polypeptide
purifié selon l'une quelconque des revendications 2 à 7, ou un système bioluminescent
modifié selon les revendications 28 à 30, ou une protéine de fusion selon l'une quelconque
des revendications 32 à 39.
42. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° I-2507.
43. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° I-2508.
44. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N. C. M. et contenant le plasmide n° I-2509.
45. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° 1-2510.
46. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° 1-2511.
47. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° 1-2512.
48. Culture telle que déposée auprès du C.N.C.M. et contenant le plasmide n° 1-2513.
49. Procédé de criblage
in vitro d'un changement dans des conditions physiques, chimiques, biochimiques, ou biologiques,
dans lequel le procédé comprend les étapes de :
(a) addition dans un système de réaction d'une composition selon la revendication
41 contenant un analyte d'intérêt en présence ou en l'absence d'une molécule d'intérêt
à tester ; et
(b) visualisation de l'émission d'énergie produite dans l'étape (a).
50. Procédé de criblage
in vitro d'une molécule capable de moduler l'énergie dans une composition selon la revendication
41, dans lequel le procédé comprend les étapes de :
(a) fourniture dans un échantillon biologique d'une composition selon la revendication
41 dans un système de réaction contenant la molécule à tester ;
(b) détection d'une modulation de l'énergie par comparaison avec un échantillon témoin
contenant ladite composition selon la revendication 41 sans la molécule à tester ;
et
(c) détermination, éventuellement, de la concentration minimale efficace de ladite
molécule capable d'inhiber ou d'augmenter le transfert d'énergie de ladite composition.