Team:ESBS-Strasbourg/Results/Characterization
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Phytochrome B
His-tagging of Phytochrome B To facilitate further characterization steps the two length-variant phytochromes B, Phytochrome B 642 (PhyB 642, BBa_K365003) and Phytochrome B 908 (PhyB 908, BBa_K365002), were His-tagged at their C-terminal end.Phytochrome B expression In order to characterize the light-sensing part of our system the short PhyB 642-His tag has been cloned into an expression plasmid under the control of the tetracycline-inducible promoter BBa_J13002 and verified by sequencing. Unfortunately, the cloning of the long PhyB 908-His tag did not succeed and was abandoned after multiple essays due to time constrains. Expression of PhyB 642 in the ΔClpX W3110 cells was attempted over several weeks. All possible parameters have been altered using different anhydrotetracycline inducer concentration (from 50 ng/µl to 1 µg/µl), different expression temperatures (30°C and 37°C) and different sampling time points (3h, 6h, 9h and 16h after induction).One possible reason for the expression failure could be the non-optimized codon usage of the Arabidopsis thaliana gene in E. coli. The analysis of the codon usage in E. coli for the PhyB 642 protein revealed a total of 7% of rarely used codons (arginine (AGA, AGG, and CGA), glycine (GGA) and proline (CCC)). In particular, there are four of these seldom codons (R31, R32, G33 and G34) in a row, which may lead to translation interruption and premature termination. The expression system has been changed and three different Bl21 strains (Bl21 wild type, Bl21 Star™ and Bl21 CodonPlus™) have been tried for expression. Especially the latter was promising in order to bypass the codon usage problem mentioned above. However, even with these three strains there was no PhyB642 expression detectable. Further analysis of active Phytochrome B (Theoretical part, as PhyB642 expression was not successful) Zinc staining In the case, that PhyB is expressed in an active conformation, it is able to auto catalyze the covalent bonding of Phycocyanobilin (PCB), when PCB is added to the medium (final concentration 5µM typically). This covalent bond links the tetrapyrrole chromophore with a conserved cysteine residue of the phytochrome B [37][Hill C et al., 1994]. It can be easily detected by zinc staining followed by fluorescence analysis under UV light, whether PCB is attached to the phytochrome. Therefore, the protein extract is run on sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) to separate protein bound PCB from unbound PCB, incubated with zinc acetate and analyzed under UV light [17][Mukougawa K et al., 2006]. Quantification of Phytochrome B activity by difference spectroscopy Difference spectroscopy can be used to analyze the light switching mechanism of the phytochrome B. The background properties, which are used in this test, are the two spectrally different forms of phytochrome, Pr and Pfr, as response to red and far-red light exposure. The difference spectrum is used to determine the amount of spectrally active phytochromes in the sample. Therefore, the Pfr absorption spectrum is subtracted from the Pr absorption spectrum, which results in the difference spectrum. Out of the difference between the minimum and the maximum of this spectrum, the active phytochrome concentration is calculated [21][McDowell MT and Lagarias JC, 2002]. |