- Aequorin
Aequorin is a photoprotein isolated from
luminescent jellyfish (like various "Aequorea" species e.g. "Aequorea victoria ") and a variety of other marine organisms.It was originally isolated from the jellyfish by
Osamu Shimomura .Aequorin is composed of two distinct units, the
apoprotein "apoaequorin", with an approximate molecular weight of 22 kDa, and theprosthetic group "coelenterazine" (molecular weight 472), amolecule belonging to theluciferin family.In the presence of molecular
oxygen the two components of aequorin reconstitute spontaneously, forming the functional protein. Researchers have located a number of "EF-hand" type regions in the structure of Aequorin that function as binding sites for Ca2+ ions: when Ca2+ occupies such sites, the protein undergoes a conformational change and converts through oxidation its prosthetic group, coelenterazine, into excitedcoelenteramide and CO2. As the excited coelenteramide relaxes to the ground state, blue light (wavelength = 469 nm) is emitted.Since the emitted light can be easily detected with a
luminometer , aequorin has become a useful tool inmolecular biology for the measurement of intracellular Ca2+ levels. Cultured cells expressing the aequoringene can effectively synthesize aequorin: howeverrecombinant expression only yields theapoprotein , therefore it is necessary to addcoelenterazine into the culture medium of the cells to obtain a functional protein and thus use its bluelight emission to measure Ca2+ concentration. Coelenterazine is a hydrophobic molecule, and therefore is easily taken up across plant and fungalcell walls , as well as theplasma membrane of higher eukaryotes, making aequorin suitable as a Ca2+ reporter (calcium in biology ) in plants, fungi and mammalian cells.Aequorin has a number of advantages over other Ca2+ indicators: it has a low leakage rate from cells, lacks phenomena of intracellular compartmentalization or sequestration and it does not disrupt cell functions or embryo developmentFact|date=December 2007. Moreover the light emitted by the oxidation of coelenterazine does not depend on any optical excitation, so problems with auto-fluorescence are eliminated.
References
* [http://ca.expasy.org/uniprot/P07164 Swiss-Prot Aequorin entry]
* A. Mithöfer and C. Mazars, "Aequorin-based measurements of intracellular Ca2+ signatures in plant cells" [http://www.biologicalprocedures.com/bpo/arts/1/40/m40.htm]
* O. Shimomura (1995). A short story of aequorin. Biol Bull. 189(1):1-5. PMID 7654844
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