posted on 2016-02-19, 21:15authored byJun Liu, Jason Karpus, Seraphine
V. Wegner, Peng R. Chen, Chuan He
Copper represents one of the most important biological
metal ions
due to its role as a catalytic cofactor in a multitude of proteins.
However, an excess of copper is highly toxic. Thus, copper is heavily
regulated, and copper homeostasis is controlled by many metalloregulatory
proteins in various organisms. Here we report a genetically encoded
copper(I) probe capable of monitoring copper fluctuations inside living
cells. We insert the copper regulatory protein Ace1 into a yellow
fluorescent protein, which selectively binds copper(I) and generates
improved copper(I) probes.