Expression of a humanized viral 2A-mediated lux operon efficiently generates autonomous bioluminescence in human cells.

  • Tingting Xu
  • Steven Ripp
  • Gary S Sayler
  • Dan M Close
Publisher
Public Library of Science (PLoS)
Journal
issn:1932-6203

Abstract

Expression of autonomous bioluminescence from human cells was previously reported to be impossible, suggesting that all bioluminescent-based mammalian reporter systems must therefore require application of a potentially influential chemical substrate. While this was disproven when the bacterial luciferase (lux) cassette was demonstrated to function in a human cell, its expression required multiple genetic constructs, was functional in only a single cell type, and generated a significantly reduced signal compared to substrate-requiring systems. Here we investigate the use of a humanized, viral 2A-linked lux genetic architecture for the efficient introduction of an autobioluminescent phenotype across a variety of human cell lines.The lux cass...

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