RESUMEN
Utilization of fluorescent proteins is widespread for the study of microbial pathogenesis and host-pathogen interactions. Here, we discovered that linkage of the 36 N-terminal amino acids of FTL_0580 (a hypothetical protein of Francisella tularensis) to fluorescent proteins increases the fluorescence emission of bacteria that express these recombinant fusions. This N-terminal peptide will be referred to as 580N. Western blotting revealed that the linkage of 580N to Emerald Green Fluorescent Protein (EmGFP) in F. tularensis markedly improved detection of this protein. We therefore hypothesized that transcripts containing 580N may be translated more efficiently than those lacking the coding sequence for this leader peptide. In support, expression of emGFPFt that had been codon-optimized for F. tularensis, yielded significantly enhanced fluorescence than its non-optimized counterpart. Furthermore, fusing emGFP with coding sequence for a small N-terminal peptide (Serine-Lysine-Isoleucine-Lysine), which had previously been shown to inhibit ribosomal stalling, produced robust fluorescence when expressed in F. tularensis. These findings support the interpretation that 580N enhances the translation efficiency of fluorescent proteins in F. tularensis. Interestingly, expression of non-optimized 580N-emGFP produced greater fluorescence intensity than any other construct. Structural predictions suggested that RNA secondary structure also may be influencing translation efficiency. When expressed in Escherichia coli and Klebsiella pneumoniae bacteria, 580N-emGFP produced increased green fluorescence compared to untagged emGFP (neither allele was codon optimized for these bacteria). In conclusion, fusing the coding sequence for the 580N leader peptide to recombinant genes might serve as an economical alternative to codon optimization for enhancing protein expression in bacteria.