partners are equally soluble during expression. [2] Traditionally, proteins that were difficult to express as a fusion were purified independently and then fused using chemical conjugation techniques. This is often the only recourse when the necessity of production-level synthesis does not overlap with an available bacterial expression system. While chemical conjugations are relatively simple to generate using the large variety of specialized crosslinkers available, it is often much more difficult to control the conjugation stoichiometry and generate reproducible signals at low concentrations.This has been the case for probably the most ubiquitous immobilization proteins in current use, avidin-like proteins. These proteins provide an extremely high affinity and selective binding interaction with their small-molecule ligand biotin, and the biotin/avidin interaction remains one of the simplest methods for noncovalent linkage. Chemical fusions are common in these systems, with associated increases in purification and stoichiometric complexity as well as decreases in total yield proportional to the number of steps after expression. Although genetic fusions can be more difficult to develop and optimize initially, they result in completely reproducible stoichiometry for straightforward and sensitive quantitative analysis [3] while being available for use almost immediately following purification rather than requiring additional reactions and expensive cleanup steps that are often necessary for chemical conjugations. However, avidin-like proteins have been particularly difficult to express and purify in a bacterial system, and although there are limited reports of soluble fusion construct expression, [4] other reports still indicate challenges [5] and provide justification for the current standard of chemically fused, avidin-like protein conjugates.To combine the general utility of a luminescent reporter/ avidin-like fusion construct with the flexibility and high yields of bacterial expression, we report a novel universal reporter/ imaging construct composed of the recently described [6] biotinbinding protein tamavidin 2 (TA2) and the extremely small and bright luminescent reporter Gaussia luciferase (Gluc) to generate the fusion protein TA2Gluc. This genetic fusion pair was chosen based on many factors, not the least of which was the previously demonstrated bacterial expression of TA2. Further, Gluc is also one of the smallest luciferases and represents a Despite the avidin/biotin reaction being one of the most ubiquitous noncovalent immobilization and sensing strategies in scientific research, the ability to synthesize useful amounts of biotin-binding fusion constructs is hampered by poor solubility in bacterial expression systems. As such, there are few reports of successful genetic reporter fusions incorporating a biotin-binding partner. To address this, a sensitivity-enhanced, synthetically facile reporter fusion is developed to merge the bioluminescence output of Gaussia luciferase (Gluc) with the recently charac...