Authors
Axel Kirchhofer, Jonas Helma, Katrin Schmidthals, Carina Frauer, Sheng Cui, Annette Karcher, Mireille Pellis, Serge Muyldermans, Corella S Casas-Delucchi, M Cristina Cardoso, Heinrich Leonhardt, Karl-Peter Hopfner, Ulrich Rothbauer
Publication date
2010/1
Journal
Nature structural & molecular biology
Volume
17
Issue
1
Pages
133-138
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group US
Description
Protein conformation is critically linked to function and often controlled by interactions with regulatory factors. Here we report the selection of camelid-derived single-domain antibodies (nanobodies) that modulate the conformation and spectral properties of the green fluorescent protein (GFP). One nanobody could reversibly reduce GFP fluorescence by a factor of 5, whereas its displacement by a second nanobody caused an increase by a factor of 10. Structural analysis of GFP–nanobody complexes revealed that the two nanobodies induce subtle opposing changes in the chromophore environment, leading to altered absorption properties. Unlike conventional antibodies, the small, stable nanobodies are functional in living cells. Nanobody-induced changes were detected by ratio imaging and used to monitor protein expression and subcellular localization as well as translocation events such as the tamoxifen …
Total citations
20102011201220132014201520162017201820192020202120222023202471020162336464555596978674932
Scholar articles
A Kirchhofer, J Helma, K Schmidthals, C Frauer, S Cui… - Nature structural & molecular biology, 2010