The bioluminescence advantage

September 13, 2011
Uncategorised
In Depth

Although scientists draw upon a range of photon-emitting chemistries for various experimental purposes, bioluminescence has become widely preferred for quantitative bioanalysis. Keith Wood discusses the advantages that bioluminescence brings to assay methodologies

Although scientists draw upon a range of photon-emitting chemistries for various experimental purposes, bioluminescence has become widely preferred for quantitative bioanalysis. Keith Wood discusses the advantages that bioluminescence brings to assay methodologies Of the many assay technologies used in life science research, photon emission chemistries are among the most popular due to their inherently high sensitivity and simplicity. These chemistries are categorised according to how the energy for photon generation is acquired. Fluorescence, the most widely used chemistry, is also called photoluminescence because it relies on photons as the energy source. Other examples include chemiluminescence, which relies on chemical energy; radioluminescence, which relies on radioactivity (e.g. scintillants); and electroluminescence, which relies on electricity.

Bioluminescence is a form of chemiluminescence where the photon emission is based on natural biochemistry, such as the enzymatic reactions found in luminous fireflies, jellyfish, bacteria and other organisms. Bioluminescent chemistries have become increasingly popular in bioanalytical methods because they can deliver 10- to 1,000-fold higher sensitivity than fluorescence assays. This increased sensitivity can substantially improve assay performance when applied to complex biological samples1.

Fluorescence can be relatively bright since excitation photons may be introduced to a sample at very high rates, for example, by using high-intensity lasers. However, this high influx of photons can also raise background levels due to two factors: the capacity of the photodetector to discriminate between excitation and emission photons, and interference from other weak fluorophores present within the samples. It is important to consider that the number of photons introduced into a fluorescent assay is enormous relative to those produced by the reporters. In contrast, although enzyme catalysis typically yields less light intensity due to slower excitation rates, the background for bioluminescence is extremely low since no photons are introduced into the sample.

Figure 1: Bioluminescent reporter assay of the beta2-adrenergic receptor. Degradation sequences incorporated into the luciferase reporter increase both the rate and relative magnitude of response. Panel A. luc2, firefly luciferase; luc2P, firefly luciferase with PEST sequence (-Pro-Glu-Ser-Thr); luc2CP, firefly luciferase with CL1 and PEST sequences. Panel B. HEK293 cells stably expressing luciferase reporter genes coupled to a cAMP-response element (CRE). Endogenous ß2-adrenergic receptors were induced with 1µM isoproterenol/ 100µM RO-20-1724.

The relationship between brightness and background has significant consequences for these photon-emitting chemistries in assay methodologies. When photon detection becomes limiting, the background levels in assays are determined largely by the detection instrument. This is the situation for such methodologies as cellular microscopy and flow cytometry, where the optics required for detecting individual cells restrict the efficiency of light collection. Here the brightness of the assay chemistry becomes the primary consideration, and consequently fluorescence is usually preferred. Photon detection for larger samples is often more efficient due to simpler optical requirements. This can be particularly true for bioluminescence since optical filters or monochromators are not needed and the detectors often can be positioned closer to the sample. In these cases, sensitivity may be dependent on the inherent background of the assay chemistry rather than the photodetector. Examples include measurements of individual sample tubes or in multiwell plates (e.g. 96- and 384-well plates), or imaging larger organisms such as mice. Bioluminescence can be measured to zeptomole levels (typically a few molecules per cell) and linearity extending over six to eight logs. Bioluminescence is further strengthened as a bioanalytical tool because it was naturally evolved within a biological context. The photon-emitting chemistry is broadly compatible with mammalian or most other biological systems, even though bioluminescence is not native to these systems. Moreover, by insulating the photon-emitting substrate within the structure of the enzyme, a high quantum yield is maintained even amid the chemical complexity inherent in biological samples. Bioluminescence is most commonly applied in life science research as reporters of gene transcription. Firefly luciferase is usually the preferred choice – a 61kDa monomeric protein that utilises luciferin, ATP and oxygen to generate yellow-green light (560nm). By using numerous signalling pathways linked to regulated gene expression, luciferase may be broadly adapted as an intracellular probe of cellular physiology.
Figure 2: Assay strategies using bioluminescence. luc, firefly luciferase gene; Ultra-Glo rLuciferase, a highly stabilised variant of  firefly luciferase; P450, cytochrome P450; MAO, monoamine oxidase.
Applying intracellular probes at low concentrations may reduce the risk of artefacts caused by unwanted physiological stresses. Although fluorescent proteins (e.g. green fluorescent protein, GFP) are widely used for imaging molecular processes within living cells, they typically are expressed at high levels to generate clearly discernable signals. Strong promoters are often used for this purpose, such as those derived from the cytomegalovirus (CMV). Although luciferase is not well suited for cellular imaging, it can be used for monitoring transcriptional regulation at much lower concentrations.

Another aspect affecting the performance of genetic reporters is response dynamics. A highly stable reporter tends to resist changes in its intracellular concentration, particularly in association with changes in the transcriptional rate. Consequently, the reporter may not accurately represent the transcriptional dynamics in living cells. Dynamic response can be improved by incorporating protein degradation signals into the reporter, but these also reduce intracellular accumulation of the reporter, thus reducing assay sensitivity. This approach works well for luciferase reporters, where the high sensitivity inherent in luminescent assays can compensate for the low intracellular accumulation. In contrast, fluorescent proteins are generally very stable within cells, and addition of degradation signals can substantially restrict assay sensitivity.

The influence of response dynamics is evident in Figure 1, where luciferase expression is coupled to the native ß2-adrenergic receptor in HEK293 cells. Stimulation of this Gas-coupled receptor causes a transient increase in intracellular cAMP, which in turn activates gene expression through a cAMP-response element (CRE). By coupling luciferase to this genetic response element, it thus becomes an intracellular probe of receptor activity. Using the optimised pGL4 Luciferase Reporter Vectors, reporter expression is increased 200-fold following receptor stimulation. The rate and magnitude of this response is improved by adding degradation sequences so that reporter expression more closely follows transcriptional dynamics.

 
Figure 3: Signal-to-noise ratio comparison of bioluminescent and fluorescent caspase-3/7 assays.
As a general principle of bioluminescent assays, the light intensity is proportional to the concentrations of the component reactants. Specific assays may be created by allowing the concentration of a particular component to vary while holding the others constant. Through chemical coupling, the variable component can be associated with a variety of molecular processes. For reporter gene assays, the variable component is the enzyme itself coupled to gene expression. But the substrates, such as ATP or luciferin, may also serve as the variable components (Figure 2).

Detection of ATP is one of the oldest applications for bioluminescence, commonly used for rapid measurement of cell viability. The assay for mammalian cells can be performed in about five minutes and is over 100-fold more sensitive than conventional tetrazolium-based assays. Similar assays for bacterial viability are sensitive to about 100 cells depending on the cell type. Bioluminescent assays for ATP may also be used to measure enzymes that consume ATP, most notably kinases. This provides a nearly universal assay for kinase activity, regardless of whether the phosphate acceptor is a protein, lipid or polysaccharide.

Luciferin may be incorporated into assay designs in a manner similar to fluorogenic assays. By attaching a modifying group, the luciferin becomes unavailable to the luminescent reaction until the modifier is removed through some biochemical process. For example, the luciferin derivative, Asp-Glu-Val-Asp-6'-aminoluciferin (DEVD-Aminoluciferin), cannot support luminescence until the tetrapeptide sequence is cleaved by the caspase-3 protease. Analogous fluorescent assays for apoptosis have been made by coupling the tetra-peptide to appropriate fluorophores such as rhodamine.  However, when compared under similar conditions, the bioluminescent assay is nearly 100- to 1,000-fold more sensitive (Figure 3). This strategy can also be used to measure CYP450 activity, monoamine oxidase activity, (Figure 2) or a variety of other enzymatic cleavage reactions.

While rapid protein degradation is advantageous for genetic reporters to increase response dynamics, high enzyme stability is preferred when luciferase is a component of the assay reagent. Thus, for assays based on detection of ATP or luciferin, a modified version of luciferase has been designed for enhanced physical robustness. This stabilised luciferase, called Ultra-Glo rLuciferase, is also resistant to chemical inhibitors such as those found in pharmaceutical compound libraries2.

Bioluminescence has proven to be adaptable for designing rapid, sensitive and simple assays for biochemical- and cell-based assays. Widely popularised for use in genetic reporters, bioluminescence has become routinely applied to a broad range of assay methodologies. These assays are generally recognised for their quantitative precision, low inherent backgrounds, and low sample interference.

References 1.    Fan, F. and Wood, K. (2007) Bioluminescent Assays for High-Throughput Screening. Assay Drug Dev. Technol. 5, 127–36. 2.    Auld, D.S. et al (2009) A Basis for Reduced Chemical Library Inhibition of Firefly Luciferase Obtained from Directed Evolution. J. Med. Chem. 52, 1450-8.

Author: Keith Wood, Ph.D., Head of Research, Advanced Technologies /Sr. Research Fellow, Promega Corporation

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