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© Sandrine Etienne-Manneville
Photo prise à l'avant (dans la protrusion) d'astrocytes primaires de rat en migration. Marquage par immunofluorescence montrant en rouge, p150 Glued, une protéine associée aux extrémités 'plus' des microtubules et en vert la tubuline des microtubules. La photographie montre l'accumulation de p150 Glued à l'avant des cellules en migration, où la protéine pourrait participer à l'ancrage des microtubules à la membrane plasmique. Pour essayer de corriger, les dérèglements observés lors de la migration des cellules d'astrocytes tumuraux ou gliomes on cherche à connaitre les mécanismes moléculaires fondamentaux qui controlent la polarisation et la migration cellulaires.
Publication : Journal of biotechnology

Codon optimization of the BirA enzyme gene leads to higher expression and an improved efficiency of biotinylation of target proteins in mammalian cells

Scientific Fields
Diseases
Organisms
Applications
Technique

Published in Journal of biotechnology - 17 Jan 2005

Mechold U, Gilbert C, Ogryzko V

Link to Pubmed [PMID] – 15707685

J. Biotechnol. 2005 Mar;116(3):245-9

Biotinylation of proteins is an attractive alternative to ‘epitope-tagging’, due to the strong biotin-(strept)avidin interaction and to the wide commercial availability of reagents for detection and purification of biotinylated macromolecules. Enzymatic biotinylation of target proteins in vivo using short biotin acceptor domains was described previously. Their use in mammalian cell requires expression of the bacterial biotinylation enzyme BirA. Here we describe the construction of a humanized version of BirA, with most of the rare codons replaced by codons that are more frequently used in human cells. The humanized BirA is expressed better in mammalian cells, resulting in improved efficiency of biotinylation in vivo. We anticipate that the humanized BirA gene will find use in many applications that involve in vivo biotinylation.