Thermostability of Firefly Luciferases Affects Efficiency of Detection by in Vivo Bioluminescence

Luciferase from the North American firefly ( Photinis pyralis ) is a useful reporter gene in vivo, allowing noninvasive imaging of tumor growth, metastasis, gene transfer, drug treatment, and gene expression. Luciferase is heat labile with an in vitro half-life of approximately 3 min at 37°C. We hav...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Brenda Baggett, Rupali Roy, Shafinaz Momen, Sherif Morgan, Laurence Tisi, David Morse, Robert J. Gillies
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SAGE Publications 2004-10-01
Series:Molecular Imaging
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1162/15353500200403178
Description
Summary:Luciferase from the North American firefly ( Photinis pyralis ) is a useful reporter gene in vivo, allowing noninvasive imaging of tumor growth, metastasis, gene transfer, drug treatment, and gene expression. Luciferase is heat labile with an in vitro half-life of approximately 3 min at 37°C. We have characterized wild type and six thermostabilized mutant luciferases. In vitro, mutants showed half-lives between 2- and 25-fold higher than wild type. Luciferase transfected mammalian cells were used to determine in vivo half-lives following cycloheximide inhibition of de novo protein synthesis. This showed increased in vivo thermostability in both wild-type and mutant luciferases. This may be due to a variety of factors, including chaperone activity, as steady-state luciferase levels were reduced by geldanamycin, an Hsp90 inhibitor. Mice inoculated with tumor cells stably transfected with mutant or wild-type luciferases were imaged. Increased light production and sensitivity were observed in the tumors bearing thermostable luciferase. Thermostable proteins increase imaging sensitivity. Presumably, as more active protein accumulates, detection is possible from a smaller number of mutant transfected cells compared to wild-type transfected cells.
ISSN:1536-0121