| Literature DB >> 17090919 |
Yuichi Oba1, Kiichi Tanaka, Satoshi Inouye.
Abstract
Firefly luciferase and fatty acyl-CoA synthetase are members of the acyl-CoA synthetase super family, which consists of a large N-terminal domain and a small C-terminal domain. Previously we found that firefly luciferase has fatty acyl-CoA synthetic activity, and also identified that the homolog of firefly luciferase in Drosophila melanogaster (CG6178) is a fatty acyl-CoA synthetase and is not a luciferase. In this study, we constructed chimeric proteins by exchanging the domain between Photinus pyralis luciferase (PpLase) and Drosophila CG6178, and determined luminescence and fatty acyl-CoA synthetic activities. A chimeric protein with the N-terminal domain of PpLase and the C-terminal domain of CG6178 (Pp/Dm) had luminescence activity, showing approximately 4% of the activity of wild-type luciferase. The Pp/Dm protein also had fatty acyl-CoA synthetic activity and the substrate specificity was similar to PpLase. In contrast, a chimeric protein with the N-terminal domain of CG6178 and the C-terminal of PpLase (Dm/Pp) had only fatty acyl-CoA synthetase activity, and the substrate specificity was similar to CG6178. These results suggest that the N-terminal domain of firefly luciferase is essential for substrate recognition, and that the C-terminal domain is indispensable but not specialized for the luminescence reaction.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 17090919 DOI: 10.1271/bbb.60364
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biosci Biotechnol Biochem ISSN: 0916-8451 Impact factor: 2.043