Abstract
AbstractThe bacterial bioluminescence system enables light production in living cells without an external luciferin. Due to its relatively low levels of light emission, many applications of bioluminescence imaging would benefit from an increase in brightness of this system. In this report a new approach of mutagenesis and screening of the involved proteins is described that is based on the identification of mutants with improved properties under rate-limiting reaction conditions. Multiple rounds of screening in Escherichia coli resulted in the operon ilux2 that contains 26 new mutations in the fatty acid reductase complex which provides the aldehyde substrate for the bioluminescence reaction. Chromosomal integration of ilux2 yielded an autonomously bioluminescent E. coli strain with 7-fold increased brightness compared to the previously described ilux operon. The ilux2 strain produces sufficient signal for the robust detection of individual cells and enables highly sensitive long-term imaging of bacterial propagation without a selection marker.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory