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  • Site-specific protein modification using lipoic acid ligase and bis-aryl hydrazone formation.

Site-specific protein modification using lipoic acid ligase and bis-aryl hydrazone formation.

Chembiochem : a European journal of chemical biology (2012-04-12)
Justin D Cohen, Peng Zou, Alice Y Ting
ABSTRACT

A screen of Trp37 mutants of Escherichia coli lipoic acid ligase (LplA) revealed enzymes capable of ligating an aryl-aldehyde or aryl-hydrazine substrate to LplA's 13-residue acceptor peptide. Once site-specifically attached to recombinant proteins fused to this peptide, aryl-aldehydes could be chemoselectively derivatized with hydrazine-probe conjugates, and aryl-hydrazines could be derivatized in an analogous manner with aldehyde-probe conjugates. Such two-step labeling was demonstrated for AlexaFluor568 targeting to monovalent streptavidin in vitro, and to neurexin-1β on the surface of living mammalian cells. To further highlight this technique, we labeled the low-density lipoprotein receptor on the surface of live cells with fluorescent phycoerythrin protein to allow single-molecule imaging and tracking over time.

MATERIALS
Product Number
Brand
Product Description

Sigma-Aldrich
R-Phycoerythrin, BioReagent, passes test for gel electrophoresis