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Conference paper

Characterizing patatin specific protease activity by high-throughput homo-FRET assay and mass spectrometry

From

Research Group for Gut, Microbes and Health, National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark1

National Food Institute, Technical University of Denmark2

Aalborg University3

Food waste and industrial side streams with high protein contents are potential and widely unexplored sources for new food ingredients. In particular, peptides liberated by proteolysis may hold unidentified latent bioactivities. However, protease selection for this liberation process is extremely challenging, as liberation of target peptides will require specific proteolysis.

Microbes are experts in spontaneous food fermentation why they may contain proteases with desired functionalities. Auxotrophic lactic acid bacteria (LAB) have adapted to diverse nutrient rich environments where they require peptide availability and uptake. Interestingly, extracellular proteases of some LABs generate sufficient peptide supply by hydrolyzing surrounding proteins, but they often display high substrate selectivity.

For instance, extracellular proteases of Lactococcus lactis are highly selective towards certain caseins. Screening other microbes may reveal novel proteases with new desired specificities that may be substantiated further through bioengineering. Nevertheless, identification of proteolysis specific for certain proteins or peptide products will require efficient high-throughput screening assays to characterize new proteolytic activity.

Here, we present a fluorescence-based assay to measure proteolysis of the main potato protein, patatin, which was recently shown to embed emulsifying and antioxidant peptides. This patatin-specific assay detects protease activity with high sensitivity by measuring the increase in fluorescence emission.

Emission increases due to the decreased homo-FRET (fluorescence resonance energy transfer), which results from proteolysis of extensively labelled patatin. The assay can easily be performed in a microplate format to achieve reproducible, high-throughput screening of proteolytic activity. We have validated the microplate format of the assay, which detects patatin-specific proteolytic activity efficiently by a variety of commercial proteases.

We investigated the effect of protein labelling on proteolytic activity by comparing proteolysis of labelled and non-labelled patatin. We show that our approach combining high-throughput homo-FRET assays and mass spectrometry are useful to characterize specific activity and cleavage patterns of isolated proteases in vitro, which can easily be adapted for other proteases and substrates.

Our vision is to adapt this assay for screening of cell cultures to facilitate characterization of e.g. membrane-bound extracellular protease activity.

Language: English
Year: 2022
Proceedings: 2nd International Conference on Microbial Food and Feed Ingredients
Types: Conference paper
ORCIDs: Christensen, Lise Friis and Hansen, Egon Bech

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