Information about the regulation of protein expression, protein modification,
protein:protein interactions and protein function during different stages of cell
development is needed to understand the development and physiology of organisms. This
complex analysis of protein function is a major task facing scientists today. Although
the field of proteomics was first described only as the study of proteins encoded by the
genome, it has now expanded to include the function of all expressed proteins. Thus it
is not just the study of all proteins expressed in a cell but also all protein isoforms
and modifications, interactions, structure and high-order complexes (Tyers and Mann,
2003).
A fundamental step for studying individual proteins is the purification of the
protein of interest. A variety of strategies have been developed for purifying proteins.
These strategies address different requirements of downstream applications including
scale and throughput. There are four basic steps required for protein purification: 1)
cell lysis; 2) binding to a matrix; 3) washing; and 4) elution. Cell lysis can be
accomplished a number of ways, including nonenzymatic methods (e.g., sonication or
French press) or use of hydrolytic enzymes such as lysozyme or a detergent reagent such
as FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent (Cat.# V8571).
FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent offers a convenient format for the in-media lysis of
E. coli cells expressing recombinant proteins without
interfering with downstream purification of tagged proteins (Stevens and Kobs, 2004). In
addition, the FastBreak™ Reagent requires only minor modifications to be used with
mammalian and insect cell lines (Betz, 2004).
Affinity purification tags can be fused to any recombinant protein of interest,
allowing fast, easy purification using the affinity properties of the tag (Nilsson
et al. 1997). Certain tags are used because they encode an
epitope that can be purified or detected by a specific antibody or because they enable
simplified purification of a desired protein.
Since protein is directly involved in biological function, a great deal of emphasis
has been placed on developing new tools for proteomic studies (Zhu et
al. 2003). A number of methods are available for functional protein
interaction studies. These include protein pull-down assays, yeast two-hybrid systems
(Fields and Song, 1989; Chien et al. 1991) and mammalian two-hybrid
systems (Giniger et al. 1985; Lin et al. 1988)
to identify protein:protein interactions, as well as protein-chip technology, mass
spectrometry, traditional one- or two-dimensional gel electrophoresis and ELISA for
protein identification.
return to top of page
Researchers often need to purify a single protein for further study. One method for
isolating a specific protein is the use of affinity tags. Affinity purification tags can
be fused to any recombinant protein of interest, allowing fast and easy purification
following a procedure that is based on the affinity properties of the tag (Nilsson
et al. 1997). Many different affinity tags have been developed
to simplify protein purification (Terpe, 2002). Fusion tags are polypeptides, small
proteins or enzymes added to the N- or C-terminus of a recombinant protein. The
biochemical features of different tags influence the stability, solubility and
expression of proteins to which they are attached (Stevens et al.
2001). Using expression vectors that include a fusion tag facilitates recombinant
protein purification.
The most commonly used tag to purify and detect recombinant expressed proteins is
the polyhistidine tag (Yip et al. 1989). Protein purification
using polyhistidine tags relies on the affinity of histidine residues for immobilized
metal such as nickel, which allows selective protein purification (Yip et
al. 1989; Hutchens and Yip, 1990). This affinity interaction is
believed to be a result of coordination of a nitrogen on the imidazole moiety of
polyhistidine with a vacant coordination site on the metal. The metal is immobilized
to a support through complex formation with a chelate that is covalently attached to
the support.
Polyhistidine tags offer several advantages for protein purification. The small
size of the polyhistidine tag renders it less immunogenic than other larger tags.
Therefore, the tag usually does not need to be removed for downstream applications
following purification. A large number of commercial expression vectors that contain
polyhistidine are available. The polyhistidine tag may be placed on either the N- or
C-terminus of the protein of interest. And finally, the interaction of the
polyhistidine tag with the metal does not depend on the tertiary structure of the
tag, making it possible to purify otherwise insoluble proteins using denaturing
conditions.
The use of the affinity tag glutathione-S-transferase (GST) is based on the strong
affinity of GST for immobilized glutathione-covered matrices (Smith and Johnson,
1988). Glutathione-S-transferases are a family of multifunctional cytosolic proteins
that are present in eukaryotic organisms (Mannervik and Danielson, 1988; Armstrong,
1997). GST isoforms are not normally found in bacteria; thus endogenous bacterial
proteins don’t compete with the GST-fusion proteins for binding to purification
resin. The 26kDa GST affinity tag enhances the solubility of many eukaryotic proteins
expressed in bacteria.
Often times protein fusion tags are used to aid in expression of suitable levels
of soluble protein as well as for purification. A unique protein tag, the
HaloTag® protein is engineered to enhance expression
and solubility of recombinant proteins in E. coli. The
HaloTag® protein tag is a 34kDa, monomeric protein tag
modified from Rhodococcus rhodochrous dehalogenase. The
HaloTag® protein was designed to bind rapidly and
covalently with a unique synthetic linker to achieve an irreversible attachment. The
synthetic linker may be attached to a variety of entities such as fluorescent dyes
and solid supports, permitting labeling of fusion proteins in cell lysates for
expression screening, and efficient capture of fusion proteins onto a purification
resin (Figure 11.1).
For protein purification, the HaloTag® Technology is
compatible with many protein expression systems and can be applied to proteins
expressed in E. coli, mammalian cells and cell-free systems. The
lack of an endogenous equivalent of the HaloTag® protein
in mammalian cells minimizes the chances of detecting false positives or nonspecific
interactions. The combination of covalent capture with rapid binding kinetics
overcomes the equilibrium-based limitations associated with traditional affinity tags
and enables efficient capture even at low expression levels. In addition, the highly
stable HaloTag® protein-ligand interaction permits boiling
the protein complex in SDS sample buffer followed by SDS-PAGE analysis.
Additional Resources for the HaloTag® Technology
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM260
HaloTag® Technology: Focus on Imaging
Technical Manual
Promega Publications
CN014
HaloTag™ technology: Cell imaging and protein analysis
CN012
Perform multicolor live- and fixed-cell imaging applications with the
HaloTag™ interchangeable labeling technology
CN011
HaloTag™ interchangeable labeling technology for cell imaging and
protein capture
PN095
HaloTag® protein: A novel reporter protein
for human neural stem cells
PN095
Cell surface HaloTag® technology: Spatial
separation and bidirectional trafficking of proteins
PN089
HaloTag™ interchangeable labeling technology for cell imaging, protein
capture and immobilization
return to top of page
Information about the regulation of protein expression, protein modification,
protein:protein interactions and protein function during different stages of cell
development is needed to understand the development and physiology of organisms. Thus,
developing tools for studying proteins is critical. Protein purification is a
fundamental step for studying individual proteins and protein complexes, and a variety
of strategies for purifying proteins have been developed to address desired scale,
throughput and downstream applications.
Protein purification can describe several different approaches with many purposes.
The most obvious is to isolate pure proteins, which is the first step for determining
protein activity or structure. A second approach is purifying proteins to study their
interactions with other proteins, DNA or RNA. This approach can be used to test whether
two proteins interact with each other, or to screen for a collection of proteins that
interacts with a target protein. These approaches have important uses, but may require
different techniques to achieve the best results.
Proteins are an important class of biological macromolecules that maintain the
structural and functional integrity of the cell. Many diseases are associated with
protein malfunction. Researchers need to isolate pure proteins to be able to delve
into the mechanistic aspects of protein function and design diagnostic and
therapeutic tests and agents.
Cultured mammalian cells offer an environment well suited for producing properly
folded and functional mammalian proteins with appropriate post-translational
modifications (Geisse, 1996; Wum, 2004) . However, the low expression levels of
recombinant proteins in cultured mammalian cells presents a challenge for their
purification. As a result, attaining satisfactory yield and purity depends on highly
selective and efficient capture of these proteins from the crude cell lysate.
One challenge the field of proteomics faces is the ability to elucidate the
function of proteins and to determine how they assemble into the complex networks
that are responsible for key cellular processes. Surface-based proteomics requires
general and facile methods for immobilizing proteins on solid surfaces in known
orientations without disrupting protein structure or function. This immobilization
must exhibit high binding capacity and minimal nonspecific adsorption. In addition,
protein complex isolation without immobilization is necessary for a variety of
downstream applications such as mass spectroscopy for the identification of protein
partners and complementary labeling.
Analysis of protein:nucleic acid interactions reveals information that can be
important for understanding mRNA regulation, chromosomal remodeling and
transcription. Nucleic acid binding proteins are required for many processes in
living organisms. Transcription factors play an important role in regulating
transcription of DNA by binding to specific recognition sites on the chromosome,
often at the gene’s promoter and by interacting with other proteins in the nucleus.
This regulation is required for cell viability, differentiation and growth (Mankan,
2009; Gosh, 1998). The ability to detect and confirm the interaction of such proteins
with various nucleic acid targets provides valuable information about the cell
signaling cascades that govern the ability of a cell to divide, migrate, interact
with its neighbors, develop and maintain specialized functions, and undergo apoptosis
at the appropriate time.
Two common techniques used to detect the interaction of nucleic acid binding
proteins with nucleic acids are the electrophoretic mobility shift assay (EMSA) and
fluorescence anisotropy assay (Lane, 1992; LiCata, 2008). EMSA involves binding
protein to a radiolabeled DNA probe followed by resolution on a polyacrylamide gel.
Due to the increase in mass, protein:probe complexes migrate slower than free probe,
allowing comparison of free versus bound probe. The specificity of such complexes is
determined using competition experiments with unlabeled specific and nonspecific
oligos. This method works best with purified protein and can be quite labor
intensive, particularly when numerous samples are being processed. In fluorescence
anisotropy, a DNA binding protein incubated with a fluorophore-labeled DNA substrate.
The sample is excited with polarized light and the emitted light from the fluorophore
is measured. Because a DNA:protein complex tumbles in solution more slowly than the
unbound DNA sustrate, there is more emitted polarized light. This method also works
best with purified protein and requires specialized equipment.
Protein chips have emerged as an approach for identification of protein:protein
and protein:nucleic acid interactions (Hall, 2004; Hall, 2007; Hudson, 2006).
Functional protein microarrays normally contain full-length functional proteins or
protein domains bound to a solid surface. Fluorescently labeled DNA is used to probe
the array and identify proteins that bind to that specific probe. Protein microarrays
provide a method for high-throughput identification of DNA:protein interactions.
Immobilized proteins can be used in protein pull-down assays to isolate protein
binding partners in vivo (mammalian cells) or in vitro, or they can be evaluated for
their enzymatic activity.
return to top of page
There is a growing need for high-throughput protein purification methods. Magnetic
resins enable affinity-tagged protein purification without the need for multiple
centrifugation steps and sequential transfer of samples to multiple tubes. There are
several criteria that define a good protein purification resin: minimal nonspecific
protein binding, high binding capacity for the fusion protein and efficient recovery
of the fusion protein. The MagneHis™ Protein Purification System meets these
criteria, enabling purification of proteins with a broad range of molecular weights
and different expression levels. The magnetic nature of the binding particles allows
purification from crude lysates to be performed in a single tube. In addition, the
system can be used on automated liquid-handling platforms for high-throughput
applications.
MagneHis™ Protein Purification System
The MagneHis™ Protein Purification System (Cat.# V8500,
V8550) uses paramagnetic precharged nickel particles (MagneHis™
Ni-Particles) to isolate polyhistidine-tagged protein directly from a crude cell
lysate. Figure 11.2 shows a schematic diagram of the MagneHis™ Protein
Purification System protocol. Using a tube format, polyhistidine-tagged protein
can be purified on a small scale using less than 1ml of culture or on a large
scale using more than 1 liter of culture. Samples can be processed in a
high-throughput manner using a robotic platform such as the Beckman Coulter
Biomek® 2000 or Biomek®
FX or Tecan Freedom EVO® instrument.
Polyhistidine-tagged proteins can be purified under native or denaturing (2–8M
urea or guanidine-HCl) conditions. The presence of serum in mammalian and insect
cell culture medium does not interfere with purification. For more information and
a detailed protocol, see Technical Manual #TM060.
Example Protocol for the MagneHis™ Protein Purification System for
Bacterial Expression
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- MagneHis™ Protein Purification System (Cat.# V8500,
V8550) and protocol
- 37°C incubator for flasks/tubes
- shaker
- magnetic separation stand
- 1M imidazole solution (pH 8.0; for insect or mammalian cells or
culture medium)
- additional binding/wash buffer (may be required if processing numerous
insect cell, mammalian cell or culture medium samples)
- solid NaCl (for insect or mammalian cells or culture medium)
- Add 110μl FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent, 10X, to 1ml of fresh bacterial
culture.
- Resuspend DNase I as indicated on the vial. Add 1μl to the lysed
culture.
- Incubate with shaking for 10–20 minutes at room temperature.
- Vortex the MagneHis™ Ni-Particles to a uniform suspension.
- Add 30μl MagneHis™ Ni-Particles to 1.1ml of cell lysate.
- Pipet to mix, and incubate for 2 minutes at room temperature.
- Place the tube in the appropriate magnetic stand for approximately 30
seconds to capture the MagneHis™ Ni-Particles. Carefully remove
supernatant.
- Remove the tube from the magnet. Add 150μl of MagneHis™ Binding/Wash
Buffer to the MagneHis™ Ni-Particles, and pipet to mix. Make sure that
particles are resuspended well.
- Place the tube in the appropriate magnetic stand for approximately 30
seconds to capture the MagneHis™ Ni-Particles. Carefully remove supernatant.
Repeat Steps 8 and 9 for a total of three washes.
- Add 100μl of MagneHis™ Elution Buffer, and pipet to mix. Incubate for 1–2
minutes at room temperature. Place the tube in the appropriate magnetic
stand, and capture the particles. Carefully remove the supernatant, which
now contains the fusion protein.
Purification using Denaturing Conditions. Proteins expressed in
bacterial cells may be present in insoluble inclusion bodies. To determine if your
protein is located in an inclusion body, perform the lysis step using FastBreak™
Cell Lysis Reagent, 10X, as described in Technical Manual #TM060. Pellet cellular
debris by centrifugation, and check the supernatant and pellet for the
polyhistidine-tagged protein by gel analysis. Insoluble proteins need to be
purified under denaturing conditions. Since the interaction of
polyhistidine-tagged fusion proteins and MagneHis™ Ni-Particles does not depend on
tertiary structure, fusion proteins can be captured and purified using denaturing
conditions by adding a strong denaturant such as 2–8M guanidine hydrochloride or
urea to the cells. Denaturing conditions need to be used throughout the procedure;
otherwise the proteins may aggregate. We recommend preparing denaturing buffers by
adding solid guanidine-HCl or urea directly to the MagneHis™ Binding/Wash and
Elution Buffers. For more detail, see Technical Manual #TM060.
Note: Do not combine FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent and denaturants. Cells can be
lysed directly using denaturants such as urea or guanidine-HCl.
Purification from Insect and Mammalian Cells. Process cells at a cell
density of 2 × 106 cells/ml of culture. Adherent cells
may be removed from the tissue culture vessel by scraping and resuspending in
culture medium to this density. Cells may be processed in culture medium
containing up to 10% serum. Processing more than the indicated number of cells per
milliliter of sample may result in reduced protein yield and increased nonspecific
binding. For proteins that are secreted into the cell culture medium, cells should
be removed from the medium prior to purification. For more detail, see Technical
Manual #TM060.
Additional Resources for the MagneHis™ Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM060
MagneHis™ Protein Purification System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN087
Efficient purification of his-tagged proteins from insect and
mammalian cells
PN086
Technically speaking: Choosing the right protein purification
system
CN009
Purifying his-tagged proteins from insect and mammalian cells
PN084
Rapid detection and quantitation of his-tagged proteins purified by
MagneHis™ Ni-Particles
PN083
MagneHis™ Protein Purification System: Purification of his-tagged
proteins in multiple formats
PN083
Automated polyhistidine-tagged protein purification using the
MagneHis™ Protein Purification System
Citations
Lee, M.
et al. (2004) Peptidoglycan recognition proteins involved in
1,3-beta-
D-glucan-dependent prophenoloxidase
activation system of insect.
J. Biol. Chem. 279, 3218–27.
Researchers used MagneHis™ Ni-Particles to purify
polyhistidine-tagged peptidoglycan recognition protein-1 (PGRP1 and
PGRP2) that had been excreted into medium supernatants. The
polyhistidine-tagged proteins were created by making fusion-protein
expression vectors from isolated H. diomphalia
larvae cDNA and the pMT/Bip/V5-His vector (Invitrogen). The construct
was then stably transfected into Drosophila
Schneider S2 cells, and the medium was monitored for secreted protein
by Western blot analysis.
PubMed Number:
14583608
MagZ™ Protein Purification System for Purification of Proteins Expressed in
Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate
Purification of a polyhistidine-tagged protein that has been expressed in
rabbit reticulocyte lysate is complicated by hemoglobin in the lysate copurifying
with the protein of interest. Hemoglobin copurification limits downstream
applications (e.g., fluorescence-based functional assays, protein:protein
interaction studies) and reduces the amount of protein purified. The MagZ™ Protein
Purification System provides a simple, rapid and reliable method to purify
expressed polyhistidine-tagged protein from rabbit reticulocyte lysate.
Paramagnetic precharged particles can be used to isolate polyhistidine-tagged
protein from 50–500μl of TNT®
Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate with minimal copurification of hemoglobin. These
polyhistidine-tagged proteins are 99% free of contaminating hemoglobin.
The MagZ™ System is flexible enough to be used with different labeling and
detection methods. Polyhistidine-tagged proteins expressed in rabbit reticulocyte
lysate can be labeled with [35S]methionine or the
FluoroTect™ GreenLys in vitro Translation Labeling System.
FluoroTect™-labeled polyhistidine-tagged proteins can be visualized by gel
analysis and analyzed using a FluorImager® instrument.
Figure 11.3 shows a schematic diagram of the MagZ™ Protein Purification System
protocol. For more detail, see Technical Bulletin #TB336.
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- MagZ™ Protein Purification System (Cat.#
V8830) and protocol
- platform shaker or rocker, rotary platform or rotator
- MagneSphere® Technology Magnetic Separation
Stand (Cat.# Z5331, Z5332, Z5341,
Z5342)
Additional Resources for the MagZ™ Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB336
MagZ™ Protein Purification System Technical Bulletin
Promega Publications
PN088
The MagZ™ System: His-tagged protein purification without hemoglobin
contamination
PN088
In vitro his-tag pull-down assay using MagZ™ Particles
The two most common support materials for resin-based, affinity-tagged protein
purification are agarose and silica gel. As a chromatographic support, silica is
advantageous because it has a rigid mechanical structure that is not vulnerable to
swelling and can withstand large changes in pressure and flow rate without
disintegrating or deforming. Silica is available in a wide range of pore and particle
sizes including macroporous silica, providing a higher capacity for large
biomolecules such as proteins. However, two of the drawbacks of silica as a solid
support for affinity purification are the limited reagent chemistry that is available
and the relatively low efficiency of surface modification.
The HisLink™ Protein Purification Resin (Cat.#
V8821) and HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System
(Cat.# V3680, V3681) overcome these limitations
using a new modification process for silica surfaces that provides a tetradentate
metal-chelated solid support with a high binding capacity and concomitantly
eliminates the nonspecific binding that is characteristic of unmodified silica.
HisLink™ Resin is a macroporous silica resin modified to contain a high level of
tetradentate-chelated nickel (>20mmol Ni/ml settled resin). Figure 11.4 show a
schematic diagram of HisLink™ Resin and polyhistidine-tag interaction. The HisLink™
Resin has a pore size that results in binding capacities as high as 35mg of
polyhistidine-tagged protein per milliliter of resin.
The HisLink™ Resin enables efficient capture and purification of bacterially
expressed polyhistidine-tagged proteins. This resin may also be used for general
applications that require an immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC) matrix
(Porath et al. 1975; Lonnerdal and Keen, 1982). HisLink™ Resin
may be used in either column or batch purification formats. For a detailed protocol
see Technical Bulletin #TB327.
Column-Based Purification using HisLink™ Resin
The HisLink™ Resin provides a conventional means to purify polyhistidine-tagged
proteins and requires only a column that can be packed to the appropriate bed
volume. If packed to 1ml under gravity-driven flow, HisLink™ Resin shows an
average flow rate of approximately 1ml/minute. In general a flow rate of
1–2ml/minute per milliliter of resin is optimal for efficient capture of
polyhistidine-tagged protein. Gravity flow of a cleared lysate over a HisLink™
column will result in complete capture and efficient elution of
polyhistidine-tagged proteins; however, the resin may also be used with vacuum
filtration devices (e.g., Vac-Man® Vacuum Manifold,
Cat.# A7231) to allow simultaneous processing of
multiple columns. HisLink™ Resin is also an excellent choice for affinity
purification using low- to medium-pressure liquid chromatography systems such as
fast performance liquid chromatography (FPLC).
Example Protocol Using the HisLink™ Resin to Purify Proteins from Cleared
Lysate by Gravity-Flow Column Chromatography
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- HisLink™ Protein Purification Resin (Cat.#
V8821) and protocol
- HEPES buffer (pH 7.5)
- imidazole
- binding buffer
- wash buffer
- elution buffer
- column [e.g., Fisher PrepSep Extraction Column (Cat.# P446) or Bio-Rad
Poly-Prep® Chromatography Column (Cat.#
731-1550)]
Cell Lysis: Cells may be lysed using any number of methods
including sonication, French press, bead milling, treatment with lytic enzymes
(e.g., lysozyme) or use of a commercially available cell lysis reagent such as
the FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent (Cat.# V8571).
If lysozyme is used to prepare a lysate, add salt (>300mM NaCl) to the
binding and wash buffers to prevent the lysozyme binding to the resin. Finally,
adding protease inhibitors such as 1mM PMSF to cell lysates does not inhibit
binding or elution of polyhistidine-tagged proteins with the HisLink™ Resin and
is highly recommended to prevent degradation of protein of interest by
endogenous proteases. When preparing cell lysates from high-density cultures,
adding DNase and RNase (concentrations up to 20μg/ml) will reduce the lysate
viscosity and aid in purification.
Example Protocol
- Prepare the binding, wash and elution buffers.
- Determine the column volume required to purify the protein of interest.
In most cases 1ml of settled resin is sufficient to purify the amount of
protein typically found in up to 1 liter of culture (cell density of
O.D.600 < 6.0). In cases of very high
expression levels (e.g., 50mg protein/liter), up to 2ml of resin per liter
of culture may be needed.
- Once you have determined the volume of settled resin required,
precalibrate this amount directly in the column by pipetting the equivalent
volume of water into the column and marking the column to indicate the top
of the water. This mark indicates the top of the settled resin bed. Remove
the water before adding resin to the column.
- Make sure that the resin is fully suspended; fill the column with resin
to the line marked on the column by transferring the resin with a pipette.
Allow the resin to settle, and adjust the level of the resin by adding or
removing resin as necessary.
Note: If the resin cannot be pipetted within 10–15 seconds of mixing,
significant settling will occur, and the resin will need to be
resuspended. Alternatively, a magnetic stir bar may be used to keep
the resin in suspension during transfer. To avoid fracturing the
resin, do not leave the resin stirring any longer than the time
required to pipet and transfer the resin.
- Allow the column to drain, and equilibrate the resin with five column
volumes of binding buffer, allowing the buffer to completely enter the resin
bed.
- Gently add the cleared lysate to the resin until the lysate has
completely entered the column. The rate of flow through the column should
not exceed 1–2ml/minute for every 1ml of column volume. Under normal gravity
flow conditions the rate is typically about 1ml/minute. The actual flow rate
will depend on the type of column used and the extent to which the lysate
was cleared and filtered. Do not let the resin dry out after you have
applied the lysate to the column.
- Wash unbound proteins from the resin using at least 10–20 column volumes
of wash buffer. Divide the total volume of wash buffer into two or three
aliquots, and allow each aliquot to completely enter the resin bed before
adding the next aliquot.
- Once the wash buffer has completely entered the resin bed, add elution
buffer and begin collecting fractions (0.5–5ml fractions). Elution profiles
are protein-dependent, but polyhistidine-tagged proteins will generally
elute in the first 1ml. Elution is usually complete after 3–5ml of buffer
have been collected per 1.0ml of settled resin, provided the imidazole
concentration is high enough to efficiently elute the protein of
interest.
Batch Purification Using HisLink™ Resin
One of the primary advantages of the HisLink™ Resin is its use in batch
purification. In batch mode, the protein of interest is bound to the resin by
mixing lysate with the resin for approximately 30 minutes at a temperature range
of 4–22°C. Once bound with protein, the resin is allowed to settle to the bottom
of the container, and the spent lysate is poured off. Washing only requires
resuspension of the resin in an appropriate wash buffer followed by a brief period
to allow the resin to settle. The wash buffer is then carefully poured off. This
process is repeated as many times as desired. Final elution is best achieved by
transferring the HisLink™ Resin to a column to elute the protein in fractions. The
advantages of batch purification are: 1) less time is required to perform the
purification; 2) large amounts of lysate can be processed; and 3) clearing the
lysate prior to purification is not required.
Purification of Polyhistidine-Tagged Proteins by FPLC
The rigid particle structure of the silica base used in the HisLink™ Resin make
this material an excellent choice for applications that require applied pressure
to load the lysate, wash or elute protein from the resin. These applications
involve both manual and automated systems that operate under positive or negative
pressure (e.g., FPLC and vacuum systems, respectively). To demonstrate the use of
HisLink™ Resin on an automated platform we used an AKTA explorer from GE
Healthcare. Milligram quantities of polyhistidine-tagged protein were purified
from one liter of culture. The culture was lysed in 20ml of binding/wash buffer
and loaded onto a column containing 1ml of HisLink™ Resin. We estimate the total
amount of protein recovered to be 75–90% of the protein expressed in the original
lysate.
Purification under denaturing conditions: Proteins that are expressed
as an inclusion body and have been solubilized with chaotrophic agents such as
guanidine-HCl or urea can be purified by modifying the protocols to include the
appropriate amount of denaturant (up to 6M guanidine-HCl or up to 8M urea) in the
binding, wash and elution buffers.
Adjuncts for lysis or purification: The materials shown in Table 11.1
may be used without adversely affecting the ability of HisLink™ Resin to bind and
elute polyhistidine-tagged proteins.
| Table 11.1. Additives That Will Not Affect Binding or Elution of Polyhistidine-Tagged
Proteins Using HisLink™ Resin. |
| Additive |
Concentration |
| HEPES, Tris or sodium phosphate buffers |
≤100mM |
| NaCl |
≤1M |
| β-mercaptoethanol |
≤100mM |
| DTT |
≤10mM |
| Triton® X-100 |
≤2% |
| Tween®
|
≤2% |
| glycerol |
≤20% |
| guanidine-HCl |
≤6M |
| urea |
≤8M |
| RQ1 RNase-Free DNase |
≤5μl/1ml original culture |
Additional Resources for the HisLink™ Protein Purification Resin
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB327
HisLink™ Protein Purification Resin Technical Bulletin
Promega Publications
PN090
HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System: Fast purification of
polyhistidine-tagged proteins
PN086
Finding the right protein purification system
CN009
Finding the right protein purification system
The HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System (Cat.# V3680,
V3681) uses a vacuum-based method to purify polyhistidine-tagged
expressed proteins directly from E. coli cultures grown in
deep-well, 96-well plates. The HisLink™ 96 System is amenable to manual or automated
methods for high-throughput applications. In preparation for protein purification,
bacterial cells expressing a polyhistidine-tagged protein are lysed directly in
culture using the provided FastBreak™ Cell Lysis Reagent. The HisLink™ Resin is added
directly to the lysate and mixed, and the polyhistidine-tagged proteins bind within
30 minutes. The samples are then transferred to a filtration plate. Unbound proteins
are washed away, and the target protein is recovered by elution. Figure 11.5
describes protein purification using the HisLink™ 96 System. This system requires the
use of the Vac-Man® 96 Vacuum Manifold
(Cat.# A2291, Figure 11.6) or a compatible vacuum
manifold. For more detailed protocol information, see Technical Bulletin #TB342.
Manual Protocol
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System (Cat.# V3680,
V3681) and protocol
- Nuclease-Free Water (Cat.#
P1195)
- Vac-Man® 96 Vacuum Manifold
(Cat.# A2291)
- plate shaker (manual) or multichannel pipette
- wide-bore tips (Racked, Sterile, Yellow Lift Top Racks; E&K
Scientific Cat.# 3502-R96S)
- 96-well, deep-well plates (e.g., ABgene 2.2ml storage plate, Marsh Bio
Products Cat.# AB-0932)
- 96-well sealing mats (Phenix Research Products Cat.# M-0662)
- 96-well plate adhesive sealers
- reservoir boats (Diversified Biotech Cat.# RESE-3000)
Automated Purification
The manual protocol described in Section III.C can be used as a guide to
develop protocols for automated workstations. The protocol may require
optimization, depending on the instrument used.
Additional Resources for HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB342
HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System Technical Bulletin
Promega Publications
PN090
HisLink™ 96 Protein Purification System: Fast purification of
polyhistidine-tagged proteins
return to top of page
There is a growing need for protein purification methods that are amenable to
high-throughput screening. Magnetic resins enable affinity-tagged protein
purification without the need for multiple centrifugation steps and transfer of
samples to multiple tubes. There are several criteria that define a good protein
purification resin: minimal nonspecific protein binding, high binding capacity for
the fusion protein and efficient recovery of the fusion protein. The MagneGST™
Protein Purification System (Cat.# V8600, V8603) meets
these criteria, enabling purification of proteins with a broad range of molecular
weights and different expression levels. The magnetic nature of the binding particles
allows purification from a crude lysate in a single tube. In addition, the system can
be used with automated liquid-handling platforms for high-throughput applications.
MagneGST™ Protein Purification System for Purification of GST-Tagged Proteins
The MagneGST™ Protein Purification System provides a simple, rapid and reliable
method to purify glutathione-S-transferase (GST) fusion proteins. Glutathione
immobilized on paramagnetic particles (MagneGST™ Glutathione Particles;
Cat.# V8611, V8612) is used to isolate
GST-fusion proteins directly from a crude cell lysate using a manual or automated
procedure. The use of paramagnetic particles eliminates several centrifugation
steps and the need for multiple tubes. It also minimizes the loss of sample
material. Although the MagneGST™ System is designed for manual applications,
samples can also be processed using a robotic platform, such as the Beckman
Coulter Biomek® 2000 or
Biomek® FX workstation, for high-throughput
applications. Visit the Promega web site for
more information about using the MagneGST™ System in an automated format.
Bacterial cells containing a GST-fusion protein are lysed using the provided
MagneGST™ Cell Lysis Reagent or an alternative lysis method, and the MagneGST™
Particles are added directly to the crude lysate. GST-fusion proteins bind to the
MagneGST™ Particles. Unbound proteins are washed away, and the GST-fusion target
protein is recovered by elution with 50mM glutathione. Figure 11.7 shows a
schematic diagram of the MagneGST™ Protein Purification System protocol. For more
detailed information about the protocol, see Technical Manual #TM240.
Additionally, we have used the MagneGST™ Particles to purify GST-fusion protein
generated in vitro using the E. coli S30 Extract System for
Circular DNA (Cat.# L1020). When eluted protein was
analyzed by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, no major contaminating
proteins were found to copurify with the GST-fusion proteins.
Example Protocol for the MagneGST™ Protein Purification System
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- MagneGST™ Protein Purification System (Cat.# V8600,
V8603) and protocol
- 1.5ml microcentrifuge tubes for small-scale protein purifications or
15ml or 50ml conical tubes for large-scale protein purifications
- magnetic separation stand
- RQ-1 RNase-Free DNase (Cat.#
M6101)
- shaker or rotating platform
- centrifuge
Cell Lysis
- Prepare cell pellets from 1ml of bacterial culture.
- Add 200μl of MagneGST™ Cell Lysis Reagent to each fresh or frozen cell
pellet. Resuspend the cell pellet at room temperature (20–25°C) by pipetting
or gentle mixing.
- Add 2μl of RQ1 RNase-Free DNase.
- Incubate the cell suspension at room temperature for 20–30 minutes on a
rotating platform or shaker.
Equilibrate Particles
- Thoroughly resuspend the MagneGST™ Particles by inverting the bottle to
obtain a uniform suspension.
- Pipet 100μl of MagneGST™ Particles into a 1.5ml tube.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Magnetic capture of the particles will
typically occur within a few seconds.
- Carefully remove and discard the supernatant.
- Remove the tube from the magnetic stand. Add 250μl of MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and resuspend by pipetting or
inverting.
- Repeat Particle Equilibration Steps 3–5 twice for a total of three
washes.
Bind Proteins
- After the final wash, gently resuspend the particles in 100μl of
MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer.
- Add 200μl of cell lysate, prepared as described above, to the
particles.
- Mix gently by pipetting or inverting. If the combined volume of cell
lysate and MagneGST™ Particles is less than 300μl, add additional MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer so that the final volume is 300μl.
- Incubate with gentle mixing on a rotating platform or shaker for 30
minutes at 4°C or room temperature.
Wash
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet.
- Carefully remove the supernatant. Save the supernatant (flowthrough) for
SDS-PAGE analysis, if desired.
- Remove the tube from the magnetic stand. Add 250μl of MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and mix gently by pipetting or
inverting. Incubate at room temperature or 4°C for 5 minutes. Occasionally
mix by inverting the tube.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet.
- Carefully remove the supernatant. Save the supernatant if analysis of
wash solution is desired.
- Remove the tube from the magnetic stand. Add 250μl of MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and mix gently by pipetting or
inverting. Incubation is not necessary at this step.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet.
- Carefully remove the supernatant. Save the supernatant if analysis of
wash solution is desired.
- Repeat Wash Steps 6–8 once for a total of three washes.
Elution
- After the final wash, add 200μl of elution buffer.
- Incubate at room temperature or 4°C for 15 minutes with gentle
mixing.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet.
- Carefully remove the supernatant, and transfer it to a clean tube. The
supernatant contains the eluted GST-fusion protein.
- If a second elution is desired, repeat Elution Steps 1–4.
Compatibility with Common Buffer Components: The MagneGST™ Particles
have been shown to be compatible with many common buffer components (Table 11.2).
| Table 11.2. Buffer Components Compatible with the MagneGST™ Particles. |
| Buffer Component |
Concentration |
| DTT |
≤10mM |
| NaCl |
≤0.64M |
| Tris, HEPES, sodium phosphate, potassium phosphate |
≤100mM |
| Triton® X-100 |
≤1% |
| Tween®
|
≤1% |
| MAZU |
≤1% |
| cetyltrimethylammonium bromide (CTAB) |
≤1% |
| ethanol |
20% |
| protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche Molecular Systems,
Inc. Cat.# 1836170) |
1X |
Additional Resources for the MagneGST™ Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM240
MagneGST™ Protein Purification System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN086
Purification of GST-fusion proteins by magnetic resin-based MagneGST™
Particles
CN009
Finding the right protein purification system
return to top of page
Cultured mammalian cells offer an environment well suited for producing properly
folded and functional mammalian proteins with appropriate post translational
modifications. However, the low expression levels of recombinant proteins in cultured
mammalian cells presents a challenge for their purification. As a result, attaining
satisfactory yield and purity depends on selective and efficient capture of these
proteins from the crude cell lysate. The equilibrium-based binding of most affinity
tag protein purification methods means that the protein is constantly being exchanged
between the bound (to the resin) and unbound state. This equilibrium depends on the
protein concentration and the binding affinity of the tag. As a result, binding
efficiency may be reduced at low expression levels, leading to low recovery of the
fusion protein.
The HaloTag® Mammalian Protein Detection and
Purification Systems (Cat.# G6795) utilize the
HaloTag® protein tag, which can be genetically fused to
any protein and transiently or stably expressed in mammalian cells. Following cell
lysis, the HaloTag® fusion protein is covalently captured
on the HaloLink™ Resin, and nonspecific proteins are washed away. The protein of
interest is then released by a specific proteolytic cleavage at an optimized TEV
recognition site contained within the amino acid linker sequence that connects the
HaloTag® protein tag and the protein of interest. The
use of a TEV protease fused to HaloTag® (HaloTEV;
Cat.# G6601), which is covalently captured on the
HaloLink™ Resin, eliminates the need for a secondary step to remove the protease,
resulting in a streamlined purification process. This straightforward purification
uses a single, mild physiological buffer throughout the entire process with no need
for buffer exchange (Figure 11.8).
HaloTag® Mammalian Protein Detection and
Purification Systems
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM348
HaloTag® Mammalian Protein Detection and
Purification Systems Technical Manual
Promega Publications
tpub_050
Highly Efficient Protein Detection and Purification from Mammalian Cells
Using HaloTag® Technology
The HaloTag® Protein Purification System
(Cat.# G6280) allows covalent, efficient and
specific capture of the proteins expressed in E. coli as
N-terminal HaloTag® fusion proteins. Many of the same
characteristics that make the Halotag® protein well-suited
for purifying proteins from mammalian cells also make it a good choice for purifying
proteins from E. coli cells. The choice of
Flexi® expression vectors is more limited for E.
coli expression, with the appropriate vectors that encodes the
HaloTag® protein and expresses protein optimally in
E. coli being the pFN18A HaloTag®
T7 Flexi® Vector (Cat.#
G2751) or the pFN18K HaloTag® T7
Flexi® Vector (Cat.#
G2681). Alternatively, non-Flexi® system
vectors are available with dual tags of HaloTag® protein
and Polyhistidine. These vectors, pH6HTN
His6HaloTag® T7 Vector
(Cat.# G7971) or the pH6HTC
His6HaloTag® T7 Vector
(Cat.# G8031), allow traditional cloning using the
multiple cloning site. These dual-tagged vectors enable purification of
HaloTag®-fused proteins that still retain the covalent
coupling ability of the HaloTag® protein. With the
HaloTag® Protein Purification System, it is easy to
perform in-gel detection and quantification of protein expression levels using
fluorescent HaloTag® Ligands.
HaloTag® Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM312
HaloTag® Protein Purification System
Technical Manual
Promega Publications
tpub_034
High Protein Yield and Purity with the
HaloTag® Protein Purification System
return to top of page
Biotinylated fusion proteins such as those produced with the PinPoint™ Xa Protein
Purification System (Cat.# V2020) can be
affinity-purified using the SoftLink™ Soft Release Avidin Resin (Cat.#
V2011). This proprietary resin allows elution of a fusion protein
under native conditions by adding exogenous biotin.
The PinPoint™ Xa Protein Purification System is designed to produce and purify
fusion proteins that are biotinylated in vivo. The biotinylation reaction in
E. coli is catalyzed by biotin ligase holoenzyme and results
in a fusion purification tag that carries a single biotin specifically on one lysine
residue (Wilson et al. 1992; Xu and Beckett, 1994; Cronan,
1990). The biotin moiety is accessible to avidin or streptavidin, as demonstrated by
binding to resins containing either molecule, and serves as a tag for detection and
purification. E. coli produces a single endogenous
biotinylated protein that, in its native conformation, does not bind to avidin,
rendering the affinity purification highly specific for the recombinant fusion
protein.
The system contains vectors in all possible reading frames, an avidin-conjugated
resin, Streptavidin-Alkaline Phosphatase, a purification column and biotin. The
PinPoint™ Xa Control Vector contains the chloramphenicol acetyltransferase (CAT) gene
and is provided as a means of monitoring protein expression, purification and
processing conditions. The PinPoint™ Vectors feature the encoded endoproteinase
Factor Xa proteolytic site that provides a way to separate the purification tag from
the native protein. These vectors also carry a convenient multiple cloning region for
ease in construction of fusion proteins.
Biotinylated proteins synthesized using the PinPoint™ Xa System can be
affinity-purified using the SoftLink™ Soft Release Avidin Resin. Avidin-biotin
interactions are so strong that elution of biotin-tagged proteins from
avidin-conjugated resins usually requires denaturing conditions. In contrast, the
SoftLink™ Soft Release Avidin Resin, which uses monomeric avidin, allows the protein
to be eluted with a nondenaturing 5mM biotin solution. The rate of dissociation of
the monomeric avidin-biotin complex is sufficiently fast to effectively allow
recovery of all bound protein in neutral pH and low salt conditions. The diagram in
Figure 11.9 outlines the expression and purification system procedure.
The SoftLink™ Soft Release Avidin Resin is highly resistant to many chemical
reagents (e.g., 0.1N NaOH, 50mM acetic acid and nonionic detergents), permitting
stringent wash conditions.
Additional Resources for the PinPoint™ Xa Protein Purification System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM028
PinPoint™ Xa Protein Purification System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN070
Development of a rapid capture ELISA using PCR products and the
PinPoint™ System
Citations
Kawasaki, H.
et al. (2003) siRNAs generated by recombinant human Dicer induce specific and
significant but target site-independent gene silencing in human cells.
Nucleic Acids Res. 31, 981–7.
The PinPoint™ Xa Protein Purification System was used to clone and
produce recombinant human Dicer (re-hDicer). Blunt-end cDNA coding hDicer
was cloned into one of the PinPoint™ Xa Vectors. Biotinylated re-hDicer
was produced in E. coli by inducing cultures with
100μM IPTG in the presence of 2μM biotin. Recombinant hDicer was purified
from E. coli lysates with SoftLink™ Soft Release
Avidin Resin. The purified re-hDicer was demonstrated to have a putative
molecular weight of ~220kDa. Recombinant-hDicer protein was also
demonstrated to have RNase III-like activity in a processing assay using
double-stranded puromycin resistance gene mRNA.
PubMed Number:
12560494
return to top of page
Determining the protein:protein interaction map (“interactome”) of the whole proteome
is one major focus of functional proteomics (Li et al. 2004; Huzbun
et al. 2003). Various methods have been used for studying
protein:protein interactions, including yeast, bacterial and mammalian two- and
three-hybrid systems, immunoaffinity purifications, affinity tag-based methods and mass
spectrometry (reviewed in Li et al. 2004; Huzbun et
al. 2003; Zhu et al. 2003). Moreover, in vitro
pull-down-based techniques such as tandem affinity purification (TAP) are being widely
used for isolating protein complexes (Forler et al. 2003).
In vitro protein pull-down assays can be performed using cell lysates, cell-free
lysates, tissue samples, etc. These options are not possible with two-hybrid approaches.
There are several reports describing the use of in vitro pull-down assays for analyzing
protein:protein interactions using proteins translated in vitro using cell-free
expression systems such as rabbit reticulocyte lysate-based expression systems
(Charron et al. 1999; Wang et al. 2001;
Pfleger et al. 2001). Cell-free expression is a powerful method for
expressing cDNA libraries. This technique is also amenable to high-throughput protein
expression and identification. Cell-free expression systems, especially rabbit
reticulocyte lysate-based methods, have been extensively used for in vitro pull-down
assays because of the ease of performing these experiments (Charron et
al. 1999; Wang et al. 2001; Pfleger et
al. 2001). There are also reports describing high-throughput identification
of protein:protein interactions using
TNT® Rabbit Reticulocyte Lysate
(Pfleger et al. 2001).
Two-hybrid systems are powerful methods to detect protein:protein interactions in
vivo. The basis of two-hybrid systems is the modular nature of some transcription
factor domains: a DNA-binding domain, which binds to a specific DNA sequence, and a
transcriptional activation domain, which interacts with the basal transcriptional
machinery (Sadowski et al. 1988). A transcriptional activation
domain in association with a DNA-binding domain promotes the assembly of RNA
polymerase II complexes at the TATA box and increases transcription. In the
CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System (Cat.# E2440),
the DNA-binding domain and transcriptional activation domain, produced by separate
plasmids, are closely associated when one protein (“X”) fused to a DNA-binding domain
interacts with a second protein (“Y”) fused to a transcriptional activation domain.
In this system, interaction between proteins X and Y results in transcription of a
reporter gene or selectable marker gene (Figure 11.10).
Originally developed in yeast (Fields and Song, 1989; Chien et
al. 1991), the two-hybrid system has been adapted for use in mammalian
cells (Dang et al. 1991; Fearon et al.
1992). One major advantage of the CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System over yeast
systems is that the protein:protein interaction can be studied in the cell line of
choice. The CheckMate™ System also uses the
Dual-Luciferase® Reporter Assay System for rapid and easy
quantitation of luciferase reporter gene expression.
Application of the CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System confirms suspected
interactions between two proteins and identifies residues or domains involved in
protein:protein interactions. When identifying residues or domains involved in an
interaction, the GeneEditor™ in vitro Site-Directed Mutagenesis System
(Cat.# Q9280) for making site-directed mutants and
Erase-a-Base® Systems for deletion analysis are useful
tools. These products are fully compatible with the CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid
System. Detailed protocol information is available in Technical Manual #TM049.
Assessing Protein:Protein Interactions
cDNA sequences encoding the polypeptides of interest are subcloned into pBIND
and pACT Vectors. The insert in each vector must be in the correct orientation and
reading frame. See the CheckMate™ System Technical
Manual
#TM049 for the multiple cloning region following the 3′ end of the
GAL4 fragment for pBIND Vector and for the multiple cloning region following the
3′ end of the VP16 fragment for pACT Vector. All vectors in the CheckMate™
Mammalian Two-Hybrid System confer ampicillin resistance and are compatible with
E. coli strains such as JM109. We strongly
recommend sequencing the 5′ junction between the insert and vector to
ensure that the insert is subcloned properly. The T7 EEV Promoter Primer
(Cat.# Q6700) can be used for sequence
verification.
Certain inserts appear to show vector “directionality” (or preference) in which
the interaction between a pair of proteins is fusion vector-dependent (Finkel
et al. 1993). Protein:protein interactions may appear
stronger given a particular vector context for the inserts. Because of this
phenomenon, we advise subcloning each cDNA of interest into both the pBIND and
pACT Vectors and testing the two possible fusion protein interactions.
Following the successful subcloning of the test cDNAs into the pBIND and pACT
Vectors, the resultant plasmids should be purified such that the DNA is free of
protein, RNA and chemical contamination. Before completing any experiments with
the CheckMate™ System, optimize the transfection method for the cell type being
transfected. The optimization process is easier using a reporter gene and assay
system. Many DNA delivery agents exist for transfecting mammalian cells.
Transfection of DNA into mammalian cells may be mediated by cationic lipids,
calcium phosphate, DEAE-dextran or electroporation. Transfection systems based on
cationic lipids (TransFast™ Transfection Reagent,
Transfectam® Reagent, Tfx™-20, Tfx™-50 Reagents) and
calcium phosphate (ProFection® Mammalian Transfection
System) are available from Promega. The efficiency of each transfection method is
highly dependent upon the cell type. When optimizing a transfection method for a
particular cell type, use a reporter gene such as the firefly luciferase gene
whose activity is easily and rapidly assayed. The pGL3-Control Vector
(Cat.# E1741) expresses the firefly luciferase
gene from the SV40 early promoter.
Table 11.3 presents the recommended combinations of vectors to properly control
an experiment when using the CheckMate™ System to determine the extent to which
two proteins interact in a two-hybrid assay.
| Table 11.3. Recommended Experimental Design to Determine the Magnitude of Interaction
Between Two Proteins. |
| Transfection |
pBIND Vector |
pACT Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
| 1 |
pBIND Vector |
pACT Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
| 2 |
pBIND-Id Control Vector |
pACT-MyoD Control Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
| 3 |
– |
– |
– |
| 4 |
pBIND-X Vector |
pACT Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
| 5 |
pBIND Vector; |
pACT-Y Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
| 6 |
pBIND-X Vector; |
pACT-Y Vector |
pG5luc Vector |
The amount of vector DNA to use will depend upon the method of transfection.
However, we recommend that the molar ratio of pBIND:pACT Vector constructs be 1:1.
We have varied the amount of pG5luc Vector in the positive
control experiment and have found that the signal-to-noise ratio of firefly
luciferase expression does not differ significantly. We routinely use a molar
ratio of 1:1:1 for pBIND:pACT:pG5luc Vector in the CheckMate™
Mammalian Two-Hybrid System. Maintain a constant amount of DNA for each
transfection reaction within an experiment by adding plasmid DNA such as
pGEM®-3Zf(+) Vector (Cat.#
P2271).
We recommend testing a specific cell line with positive and negative control
transfection reactions before initiating test experiments. The pBIND Vector
encodes the Renilla luciferase gene to normalize for
transfection efficiency. Replication of pBIND and pACT Vectors and their
recombinants is expected in COS cells or other types of cells that express the
SV40 large T antigen. Use the Dual-Luciferase® Reporter
Assay System (Cat.# E1910) to quantitate
Renilla luciferase and firefly luciferase activities.
Additional Resources for the CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM049
CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN066
The CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System
Vector Maps
pACT Vector and pACT-MyoD Control Vector
pBIND Vector and pBIND-Id Control Vector
pG5luc Vector
Citations
Suico, M.
et al. (2004) Myeloid Elf-1-like factor, an ETS transcription factor, up-regulates
lysozyme transcription in epithelial cells through interaction with
promyelocytic leukemia protein.
J. Biol. Chem. 279, 19091–8.
The authors investigated the role of the promyelocytic leukemia
(PML) nuclear body in transactivation of myeloid elf-1-like factor
(MEF), a transcription factor that upregulates lysozyme transcription.
To determine if the nuclear factors affected MEF, HeLa cells were
cotransfected with 0.2μg of a pGL2 Vector construct with a lysozyme
promoter and various combinations of 0.1μg of MEF, 0.5μg of PML and
1μg of Sp100 (another nuclear body factor) plasmids. Expression was
normalized to 10ng of phRG-TK Vector. Forty-eight hours
post-transfection, the cells were harvested and luciferase activity
measured using the Dual-Luciferase®
Reporter Assay System. In addition, MEF mutants were made and tested
in the same dual-reporter system to determine if transactivation was
affected by the various deletion mutations. These MEF mutants were
also cloned into a vector with the yeast GAL4 DNA-binding domain to
help determine which domain of MEF was interacting with PML nuclear
body in a mammalian two-hybrid system. This was done using the
CheckMate™ Mammalian Two-Hybrid System.
PubMed Number:
14976184
Traditional protein pull-down approaches rely upon binding to an affinity resin,
and often this is not a very efficient process. The
HaloTag® system is similar in that it is based on a
protein fusion tag, but its rapid, covalent and irreversible binding sets it apart
from other affinity tags. These properties increase the chances of capturing protein
complexes and retaining them after capture. In addition, the lack of an endogenous
equivalent of the HaloTag® protein in mammalian cells
minimizes the chances of detecting false positives or nonspecific interactions. An
overview of the Halotag® Mammalian Protein Pull-Down
System (Cat.# G6500, G6504) is depicted in Figure
11.11. More information and detailed protocol information is available in Technical
Manual #TM342.
HaloTag® Mammalian Pull-Down Protocol
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- HaloTag® Mammalian Pull-Down System
(Cat.# G6500, G6504) and protocol
- vector encoding HaloTag® fusion protein
(Cat.# G9651, G9661, G1611, G1601, G1591, G1571, G1551,
G1321, G2821, G2831, G2841, G2851, G2861, G2871, G2881 or
G2981) in the form of transfection-grade DNA
- HaloTag® Control Vector (Cat.#
G6591) in the form of transfection-grade DNA
- cells for transfection or a stable cell line expressing the desired
HaloTag® fusion protein
- cellular growth media
- transfection reagents
- PBS - tissue culture certified
- ethanol
- IGEPAL® CA-630 (Sigma Cat.# 18896)
- rotating or shaking platform
- microcentrifuge
- cell culture incubator
- glass homogenizer (e.g., 2ml Kontes Dounce Tissue Grinder; Thermo Fisher
Scientific Cat.# K885300-0002) or 25- to 27-gauge needle
- disposable cell lifter (e.g., Thermo Fisher Scientific Cat.#
08-773-1)
Phase 1. Equilibrate Resin
- Mix the HaloLink™ Resin by inverting the bottle to obtain a uniform
suspension.
- For each pull-down experiment, dispense 200µl of HaloLink™ Resin into two
1.5ml microcentrifuge tubes (one tube for the experimental sample and one tube
for the negative control sample). Centrifuge for 1 minute at 800 ×
g. Carefully remove and discard the supernatant, leaving
the resin at the bottom of the tube.
- Add 800µl of Resin Equilibration/Wash Buffer. Mix thoroughly by inverting
the tube. Centrifuge for 2 minutes at 800 × g. Remove and
discard the supernatant, leaving the resin at the bottom of the tube. Repeat
this wash step twice more for a total of 3 washes. Do not remove the final wash
supernatant until you are ready to bind lysates (Phase 3). This will prevent
the resin from drying out.
Phase 2. Prepare HaloTag® Fusion Protein and
Control Lysates
- For each sample, grow approximately 1–1.2 × 107
cells.
Note: If your protein shows extremely low or high expression, you may need to
adjust the amount of starting cells up or down by a factor of two- to
fivefold.
- Add 25–30ml of ice-cold PBS to the cells, and gently scrape to collect
cells into conical tubes. Centrifuge the cells at 4°C for 5–10 minutes at 2,000
× g, and discard the PBS. Store the cell pellets at –80°C
for at least 30 minutes prior to lysing.
- Thaw the frozen cell pellet, and resuspend the cells in 300µl of Mammalian
Lysis Buffer; pipette or briefly vortex to mix.
Note: Mammalian Lysis Buffer is optimized for total cellular lysis, including
the nucleus. If cytoplasmic and nuclear fractions need to remain as separate
pools, perform an initial cytoplasmic lysis. If you are processing the
cytosolic fraction only, discard the nuclear pellets. If you will be processing both the cytosolic and nuclear fractions, the
nuclear pellets can be lysed subsequently with the Mammalian Lysis Buffer as
described here. If you know your complex requires certain cofactors or small
molecules to maintain complex integrity, please add these to the Mammalian
Lysis Buffer and the wash buffer.
- Add 6µl of the 50X Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Cat.#
G6521) and incubate on ice for 5 minutes.
- To reduce lysate viscosity following the incubation, homogenize with a
Dounce glass homogenizer (2ml size) on ice using 25–30 strokes using the large
pestle (B). Alternatively, pass the cells through a 25- or 27-gauge needle 5–10
times.
Note: We do not recommend sonication because protein complexes may fall apart,
and overheating may reduce the HaloTag® protein
activity.
- Centrifuge the sample at 14,000 × g for 5 minutes at
4°C to clear the lysate.
Note: If processing nuclear fractions these may be optionally treated with RQ1
RNase-Free DNase (Cat.# M6101) to reduce DNA
content in the nuclear lysate. After the standard lysis protocol, add 30µl
of 10X RQ1 DNase 10X Reaction Buffer and 3µl of RQ1 RNase-Free DNase.
Incubate at room temperature for 10 minutes with gentle shaking. Continue
with the standard lysis protocol.
- Transfer the clear lysate to new tube, and place the tube on ice until Phase
3.
Phase 3. Bind Protein Complexes
- Immediately before binding, dilute the 300µl of clear lysate prepared in
Phase 1 with 700µl of 1X TBS.
Note: We recommend you determine the binding efficiency (see Technical Manual
#TM342), and to do so you will need to set aside 10µl of the
diluted lysate as the prebinding fraction. Store this fraction on ice.
- Remove the Resin Equilibration/Wash Buffer supernatant from the equilibrated
resin, and add the remainder of the diluted lysate.
- Incubate with mixing on a tube rotator (or equivalent device) for 15 minutes
at room temperature. Make certain that the resin does not settle to the bottom
of the tube; settling will reduce binding efficiency.
Note: In most cases 15 minutes binding time is sufficient to capture abundant
protein complexes. For low abundance or larger protein complexes, this
incubation time can be extended to 30-60 minutes at room temperature. Longer
incubation times may increase non-specific binding. To capture membrane associated protein complexes extend the binding
incubation time to 60 minutes at room temperature. For unstable or temperature sensitive protein complexes the binding can
be performed at 4°C for 2 hours to overnight.
- Centrifuge the tubes for 2 minutes at 800 × g, and
discard the supernatant.
Note: To determine the binding efficiency, set aside 10µl of the supernatant
as the unbound fraction. Store this fraction on ice.
Phase 4. Washing
- Add 1ml of Resin Equilibration/Wash Buffer to each tube, and mix thoroughly
by gently inverting the tube. Centrifuge for 2 minutes at 800 ×
g. Discard the wash. Repeat three additional times, for a
total of four washes.
- Add 1ml of Resin Equilibration/Wash Buffer, and mix thoroughly by inverting
the tube. Incubate at room temperature for 5 minutes with mixing. Centrifuge
for 2 minutes at 800 × g. Discard the wash.
Note: The stability of different protein complexes will depend on the binding
affinities between the proteins in the complex, and the washing conditions
may need to be optimized.
Phase 5. Protein Elution
- For each sample, resuspend the resin with 50µl of SDS Elution Buffer.
Incubate the tubes for 30 minutes with shaking at room temperature.
Note: In some instances, it is possible to substitute the SDS Elution Buffer
for an optional urea elution buffer as described in the Technical Manual
#TM342. Samples eluted in urea may be directly digested with
Lys-C prior to mass spectroscopy analysis.
- Centrifuge for 2 minutes at 800 × g, and carefully transfer the eluate to a
fresh tube leaving the resin at the bottom.
Note: Resin particles in the eluted fraction could be problematic if the sample
is to be analyzed directly in solution by mass spectroscopy. This elution method releases the interacting protein partners and leaves
behind the HaloTag® fusion protein, which is
covalently bound to the resin. Alternatively, TEV Protease cleavage can be
used to isolate the entire complex including the bait protein originally
fused to the HaloTag® protein.
Additional Resources for the HaloTag® Pull-Down
Assays
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM342
HaloTag® Mammalian Pull-Down and Labeling
Systems Technical Manual
Promega Publications
tpub_040
Efficient Isolation, Identification and Labeling of Intracellular
Mammalian Protein Complexes
Glutathione-S-Transferase (GST) Pull-Down Assays
The glutathione-S-transferase (GST) pull-down assay (Kaelin et
al. 1991) is an important tool to validate suspected protein:protein
interactions and identify new interacting partners (Benard and Bokoch, 2002; Wang
et al. 2000; Wada et al. 1998; Malloy
et al. 2001). GST pull-down assays use a GST-fusion
protein (bait) bound to glutathione (GST)-coupled particles to affinity purify any
proteins that interact with the bait from a pool of proteins (prey) in solution.
Bait and prey proteins can be obtained from multiple sources, including cell
lysates, purified proteins and in vitro transcription/translation systems.
The MagneGST™ Pull-Down System (Cat.# V8870) is
optimized for detection of protein:protein interactions where the bait protein is
prepared from an E. coli lysate and mixed with prey protein
synthesized in the TNT® T7 Quick
Coupled Transcription/Translation System (Cat.#
L1170). The magnetic nature of the MagneGST™ GSH-linked particles
in this system offers significant advantages over traditional resins, which
require lengthy preparation and equilibration and are hard to dispense accurately
in small amounts. The MagneGST™ Particles are easy to dispense in volumes less
than 5μl, and equilibration is quick and easy and does not require any
centrifugation steps. Another advantage of this system is that the pull-down
reaction is performed in one tube. The particles are easily and efficiently
separated from supernatants using a magnetic stand without centrifugation,
increasing reproducibility and reducing sample loss. The flexible format of the
MagneGST™ Pull-Down System allows optimization of experimental conditions,
including modification of particle volume, to fit specific requirements of each
unique protein:protein interaction. Additionally, the system allows easy
processing of multiple samples at once.
The MagneGST™ Pull-Down System provides GST-linked magnetic particles that
enable simple immobilization of bait proteins from bacterial lysates and an in
vitro transcription/translation system for expressing prey proteins. The MagneGST™
Pull-Down protocol can be divided into three phases: 1) the prey protein is
expressed in the TNT® T7 Quick
Coupled System; 2) bait protein present in crude E. coli
lysate is immobilized on the MagneGST™ Particles; and 3) the prey protein is mixed
with MagneGST™ Particles carrying the bait protein and captured through bait:prey
interaction. Nonspecifically bound proteins are washed away, and the prey and bait
proteins are eluted with SDS loading buffer. Prey proteins can be analyzed by
SDS-PAGE and autoradiography if the prey protein was radioactively labeled during
synthesis.
The transcription/translation component of the MagneGST™ Pull-Down System is
the TNT® T7 Quick Master Mix,
which allows convenient, single-tube, coupled transcription/translation of genes
cloned downstream from a T7 RNA polymerase promoter. The
TNT® System is compatible
with circular (plasmid) or linear (plasmid or PCR product) templates. For more
information on the TNT® T7 Quick
Coupled Transcription/Translation System, refer to Technical Manual #TM045. An overview of the MagneGST™ Pull-Down System is depicted in
Figure 11.12. An animated presentation of the MagneGST™
pull-down process using the TNT®
T7 Quick Coupled System is available. More information and detailed protocol
information is available in Technical Manual #TM249.
Example Protein Pull-Down Protocol Using the MagneGST™ Pull-Down System
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- MagneGST™ Pull-Down System (Cat.#
V8870) and protocol
- Magnetic Separation Stand (Cat.# Z5342, Z5343, Z5332,
Z5333 or A2231)
- radiolabeled methionine (e.g., ]35S]Met,
10–40μCi per TNT®
reaction) for radioactive detection of prey protein or specific
antibodies for detection using Western blot analysis
- RQ1 RNase-Free DNase (Cat.#
M6101)
- NANOpure® or double-distilled water
- SDS loading buffer
- BSA (Cat.# W3841) or
IGEPAL® CA-630 (Sigma Cat.# I3021)
Express Prey Protein using a
TNT® T7 Quick Coupled
Transcription/Translation Reaction
- Remove the reagents from storage at –70°C. (Store the RQ1 DNase at –20°C
after first use.) Thaw the
TNT® T7 Quick Master Mix
by hand-warming or on ice. The other components can be thawed at room
temperature and stored on ice.
- Assemble the reaction components as shown in the table below using
template DNA encoding your prey protein of interest. Incubate the reaction
at 30°C for 60–90 minutes. During this incubation period, prepare the
MagneGST™ Particles.
| Example of a TNT® T7
Quick Reaction Using Plasmid DNA. |
| Components |
Reaction Using
[35S]Methionine |
Reaction Using Unlabeled Methionine |
| TNT® T7 Quick
Master Mix |
40μl |
40μl |
| Methionine, 1mM |
– |
1μl |
| [35S]methionine
(1,000Ci/mmol at 10mCi/ml) |
2μl |
– |
| plasmid DNA template(s) (0.5μg/μl) |
2μl |
2μl |
| Nuclease-Free Water to a final volume of |
50μl
|
50μl
|
Immobilize GST-Fusion Proteins onto MagneGST™ Particles
Lyse Cells
- Harvest cells from 1ml of bacterial culture.
- Add 200μl of MagneGST™ Cell Lysis Reagent to each fresh or frozen cell
pellet. Resuspend the cell pellet at room temperature (20–25°C) by pipetting
or gentle mixing.
- Add 2μl of RQ1 RNase-Free DNase.
Note: Addition of DNase reduces viscosity and can increase the purity of
GST-fusion proteins. Up to 5μl of RQ1 RNase-Free DNase can be added to
reduce viscosity. The DNase can be omitted, if desired.
- Incubate the cell suspension at room temperature for 20–30 minutes on a
rotating platform or shaker. During this incubation, begin the particle
equilibration procedure.
Equilibrate Particles
- Thoroughly resuspend the MagneGST™ Particles by inverting the bottle
several times to obtain a uniform suspension.
- Pipet 20μl of MagneGST™ Particles into a 1.5ml tube.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Magnetic capture will typically occur within a
few seconds.
- Carefully remove and discard the supernatant.
- Remove the tube from the magnetic stand. Add 250μl of MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and resuspend by pipetting or
inverting.
- Repeat Steps 3–5 two more times for a total of three washes.
Bind Protein
- After the final wash, resuspend the particles in 100µl of MagneGST™
Binding/Wash Buffer.
Note: Adding up to 1% BSA may reduce nonspecific binding and potential
problems with background. IGEPAL® CA-630 (NP40
analog) at final concentration 0.5% may have the same effect. The amount
of BSA used may need to be optimized for your particular protein.
- Add 200μl of cell lysate containing the GST-fusion protein or GST control
to the MagneGST™ Particles.
- Incubate (with constant gentle mixing) for 30 minutes at room temperature
on a rotating platform.
Note: Do not allow the MagneGST™ Particles to settle for more than a few
minutes during capture of the bait protein as this will reduce binding
efficiency.
Wash
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Carefully remove the supernatant, and save for
gel analysis (optional).
- Add 250μl of MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and gently
mix. Incubate at room temperature for 5 minutes while mixing occasionally by
tapping or inverting the tube.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Carefully remove the supernatant, and discard
(or save if analysis of wash is desired).
- Add 250μl of MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer to the particles, and mix
gently by inverting the tube. (The 5-minute incubation is not required at
this wash step.)
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Carefully remove the supernatant, and discard
(or save if analysis of wash is desired).
- Repeat Steps 4–5 for a total of three washes.
- After the last wash, resuspend the particles in 20μl of MagneGST™
Binding/ Wash Buffer.
- We recommend using 5μl of the immobilized GST-fusion or GST control for
the pull-down assay. Thus, 20μl of particles will provide sufficient
material for more than one set of pull-down reactions. However, in some
cases more than 5μl may be required for one pull-down reaction.
Capture, Wash and Analysis of Prey Protein
Capture
- Add 20µl of the TNT® T7
Quick coupled transcription/translation reaction from Phase 1 to each 5μl
aliquot of particles carrying GST-fusion protein (or GST control).
- Add 155μl MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer and 20μl 10% BSA (or 175μl
MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer if BSA is omitted) to a final volume of 200μl
for each pull-down reaction.
Note: MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer is a neutral PBS buffer, allowing the
user to optimize buffer conditions for each specific protein:protein
interaction. Some protein interactions will require the presence of
various cofactors, salts and detergents.
- Incubate for 1 hour (with gentle mixing) at room temperature on a
rotating platform.
Note: Do not allow the MagneGST™ Particles to settle for more than a few
minutes during capture of the prey protein, as this will reduce binding
efficiency.
- Place the tube in a magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles to
be captured by the magnet.
Washing
- Add 400μl of MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer, and mix gently by inverting
the tube.
- Incubate at room temperature for 5 minutes while mixing occasionally by
tapping or inverting the tube.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Remove the supernatant, and save for analysis
(it is especially important to keep this fraction during initial
optimization).
- Add 400μl of MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer, and mix gently by inverting
the tube. (The 5-minute incubation is not required at this wash
step.)
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet.
- Repeat Steps 4 and 5 three more times for a total of five washes.
Elution
- Add 20μl of 1X SDS loading buffer.
- Incubate for 5 minutes at room temperature with mixing.
- Place the tube in the magnetic stand, and allow the MagneGST™ Particles
to be captured by the magnet. Remove the eluate for analysis.
Analysis
Prepare samples for SDS-PAGE analysis. For radioactively labeled prey proteins,
we recommend loading 1–2% of each sample volume.
Additional Resources for the MagneGST™ Pull-Down System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM249
MagneGST™ Pull-Down System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN087
Detection of protein:protein interactions using the MagneGST™
Pull-Down System
return to top of page
Regulation of chromatin structure and gene expression is essential for normal
development and cellular growth. Transcriptional events are tightly controlled both
spatially and temporally by specific protein:DNA interactions. Currently there is a
rapidly growing trend toward genome-wide identification of protein-binding sites on
chromatin to characterize regulatory protein:DNA interactions that govern the
transcriptome. Common methods to examine protein:DNA interactions include the
electrophoretic mobility shift assay, also known as the gel shift assay, and chromatin
immunoprecipitation (Solomon et al. 1985; Solomon et
al. 1988) coupled with DNA microarray or ultrahigh-throughput sequencing
analysis.
Electrophoretic mobility shift assays (EMSA) or gel shift assays can be used to
analyze protein:DNA complexes expressed in vitro. The proteins are incubated with an
oligonucleotide containing a target consensus sequence site, and DNA binding is
detected by gel shift. An animated presentation of protein:DNA interaction
detection using the TNT® Systems
and Gel Shift Assay is available. The gel shift assay provides a simple and rapid
method to detect DNA-binding proteins (Ausubel et al. 1989).
This method is used widely in the study of sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins
such as transcription factors. The assay is based on the observation that complexes
of protein and DNA migrate through a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel more slowly
than free DNA fragments or double-stranded oligonucleotides. The gel shift assay is
performed by incubating a purified protein, or a complex mixture of proteins (such as
nuclear or cell extract preparations), with a 32P
end-labeled DNA fragment containing the putative protein-binding site. The reaction
products are then analyzed on a nondenaturing polyacrylamide gel. The specificity of
the DNA-binding protein for the putative binding site is established by competition
experiments using DNA fragments or oligonucleotides containing a binding site for the
protein of interest or other unrelated DNA sequences.
Promega gel shift assay systems contain target oligonucleotides, a control extract
containing DNA-binding proteins, binding buffer and reagents for phosphorylating
oligonucleotides. The Gel Shift Assay Core System (Cat.#
E3050) includes sufficient HeLa nuclear extract to perform 20 control
reactions, Gel Shift Binding 5X Buffer, an SP1 Consensus Oligo and an AP2 Consensus
Oligo. The complete Gel Shift Assay System (Cat.#
E3300) contains five additional double-stranded oligonucleotides that
represent consensus binding sites for AP1, NF-κB, OCT1, CREB and TFIID. These
oligonucleotides can be end-labeled and used as protein-specific probes or as
specific or nonspecific competitor DNA in competition assays. A detailed protocol is
available in Technical Bulletin #TB110.
Additional Resources for Gel Shift Assay Systems
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB110
Gel Shift Assay Systems Technical Bulletin
Citations
Lee, J.
et al. (2002) Kaurane diterpene, kamebakaurin, inhibits NF-kappa B by directly
targeting the DNA-binding activity of p50 and blocks the expression of
antiapoptotic NF-kappa B target genes
J. Biol. Chem. 277, 18411–20.
To investigate the effect of the compound kamebakaurin (KA) on NF-κB,
an NF-κB-responsive firefly luciferase vector was transfected into HeLa,
Jurkat and THP-1 cells. The Luciferase Assay System was used to assay the
level of NF-κB induction after treatment of cells with various
concentrations of KA. To determine if KA influenced the DNA-binding
activity of NF-κB, nuclear extracts of HeLa, Jurkat and THP-1 cells were
prepared after preincubation with KA and stimulation of NF-κB activity.
Control nuclear extracts were prepared from unstimulated p50- or
RelA-overexpressed MCF-7 cells. In addition, the wildtype and DNA-binding
mutant RelA and p50 (NF-κB) His-tagged proteins were translated using the
TNT® Quick Coupled
Transcription/Translation System and subsequently purified. Using the Gel
Shift Assay System, the NF-κB and AP1 oligos were tested for
electromobility shifts with the prepared nuclear extracts or with
purified wildtype and mutant proteins. Supershift studies using anti-p50
or anti-RelA antibodies were also performed
PubMed Number:
11877450
Chromatin immunoprecipitation (ChIP) is an experimental method used to determine
whether DNA-binding proteins, such as transcription factors, associate with a
specific genomic region in living cells or tissues. Cells are treated with
formaldehyde to form covalent crosslinks between interacting proteins and DNA.
Following crosslinking, cells are lysed, and the crude cell extracts are sonicated to
shear the DNA. The DNA:protein complex is immunoprecipitated using an antibody that
recognizes the protein of interest. The isolated complexes are washed, then eluted.
The DNA:protein crosslinks are reversed by heating and the proteins removed by
proteinase K treatment. The remaining DNA is purified and analyzed by various ways,
including PCR, microarray analysis or direct sequencing.
Antibody-Based ChIP
The standard ChIP assay requires 3–4 days for completion (Figure 11.13). The
procedure requires antibodies highly specific to the protein of interest to
immunoprecipitate the DNA:protein complex. The success of the procedure relies on the
ability of the antibody to bind to the target protein after crosslinking, cell lysis
and sonication, all of which can negatively affect epitope recognition by the
antibody.
HaloCHIP™ System—an Antibody-Free Approach
To address the difficulties that arise when performing ChIP, a novel method that
does not require the use of antibodies, the HaloCHIP™ System, has been devised for
the covalent capture of protein:DNA complexes. DNA-binding proteins of interest are
expressed in cells as HaloTag® fusion proteins,
crosslinked to DNA, then captured on the HaloLink™ Resin, which forms a highly
specific, covalent interaction with HaloTag® proteins. Due
to the covalent linkage between the resin and crosslinked protein:DNA complexes, the
resin can be stringently washed to remove nonspecifically bound DNA and protein more
efficiently than co-immunoprecipitation. The crosslinks are reversed to release
purified DNA fragments from the resin. By improving specificity and reducing
background during the isolation of protein:DNA complexes, the HaloCHIP™ approach
effectively increases the signal-to-noise ratio to permit detection of small changes
in protein binding within a genome. The HaloCHIP™ System (Cat.#
G9410) is currently available. An animation of this procedure is available.
Additional Resources for the HaloCHIP™ System
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TM075
HaloCHIP™ System Technical Manual
Promega Publications
PN097
HaloCHIP™ System: Mapping intracellular protein:DNA interactions using
HaloTag® technology
return to top of page
Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) combine the specificity of antibodies
with the sensitivity of reporter enzyme assays, using antibodies or antigens
conjugated to an easily-assayed enzyme. The purpose of the ELISA is to determine if a
particular protein is present in a sample and to quantitate how much. There are two
main variations of this method: the ELISA can determine how much antibody is in a
sample, or it can quantitate the amount of a specific antigen in the sample.
In general, the first step in an ELISA is to adsorb the analyte (material to be
assayed or measured) to a solid support (e.g. 96-well plate). This is followed by
sequentialy incubating with primary and secondary antibodies.The secondary antibody
is linked to an enzyme, which will react with its substrate to produce a detectable
signal, such as a color change in the substrate, or a florescent or chemiluminescent
signal. Alternatively, antibodies could be linked to fluorescent or radioactive
labels and detected using the appropriate instrumentation. ELISAs are one of the most
widely used molecular biology techniques. For example, ELISAs are used in antibody
production to identify which clones or animals are are producing a high level of
antigen-specific antibody. In addition, they can be used to quantitate the amount of
a specific antigen in a sample since the intensity of signal will be directly
proportional to the amount of antigen captured and bound by the secondary antibodies.
Indirect ELISA
In an indirect ELISA, the antigen is immobilized on a solid surface such as a
96-well plate, the surface is then blocked to prevent non-specific binding of
downstream reagents. The blocked plate is then incubated with primary antibody
that will specifically bind to the antigen. The appropriately labeled secondary
antibody is then added to bind to and detect the primary antibody; the enzyme
label on the secondary antibody reacts with the detection substrate and generates
a visible signal. in this method it is critical that the secondary antibody be
specific for the primary antibody only. This can be achieved by using secondary
antibodies that have been raised against the host species of the primary antibody
(e.g., goat anti-mouse IgG secondary antibodies would bind all mouse antibodies).
The detection substrate reacts with the enzyme label on the antibody (e.g.,
horseradish peroxidase) and generates either a chromogenic (color change),
fluorescent or luminescent signal. The presence of the signal indicates secondary
antibody has bound to primary antibody; the higher the concentration of the
primary antibody, the greater the signal. One core disadvantage of the indirect
ELISA approach is that the method of antigen immobilization is nonspecific. If
crude serum is used as the source of antigen analyte, then all the proteins in the
serum will adsorb to the plate, and the antigen must compete with other serum
proteins when binding to the surface of the plate.
Capture ELISA (Sandwich ELISA)
In a sandwich ELISA a capture antibody specific to the antigen analyte is first
coated on to the microplate surface. The sample containing the antigen is added
and allowed to bind to the capture antibody on the surface. This is followed by
adding a primary antibody that will bind to the antigen. The monicker, "sandwich
ELISA", is based on that the analyte antigen is sandwiched between two primary
antibodies. This is followed by addition of appropriately labeled secondary
antibodies and the corresponding detection substrate as discussed above. It is
important to use the secondary antibody against the same species as the primary
antibody and not the capture antibody. The capture antibody and the primary
antibodies need to come from two different species (e.g. mouse and rabbit). The
main advantage of the sandwich ELISA approach is that it greatly enhances the
specificity and sensitivity of the assay. The main disadvantage is that it
requires a matched pair of antibodies that will bind to two different sites
(epitopes) on the antigen to form a "sandwich".
Direct ELISA
The direct ELISA approach uses a directly labeled primary antibody that reacts
with the antigen. Direct detection is performed in lieu of using a labeled
secondary antibody. The main advantages of this approach are that it is simpler
and more quantitative compared to using a secondary antibody. The main
disadvantages are that direct labeling of the primary antibodies (or antigens) is
time-consuming and may negatively affect their reactivity.
Competitive ELISA
The steps for a competitive ELISA are slightly different than for the
previously mentioned methods. For a competitive ELISA, unlabeled (primary)
antibody is incubated with the sample containing the antigen and then the mixture
is added to an antigen-coated well. Only the free antibody that did not previously
bind to the antigen in the sample will bind to the antigen-coated well. Washing
removes any unbound material, leaving bound only the antibody that was not
competed away by the antigen in the sample. The term competitive is based on the
fact that the more antigen is present in the sample, the less antibody will be
able to bind to the antigen in the well. As described before, the secondary
antibody, conjugated to an enzyme, is added and followed by the substrate to
generate a signal. In this type of ELISA, the higher the antigen concentration in
the sample, the weaker the eventual signal. The competitive ELISA method offers
the advantage of using crude or impure samples and still selectively binding any
antigen that may be present. The main dissadvantage of this approach is that it is
more difficult to setup and optimize.
Common Enzyme labels
Enzyme-conjugated secondary antibodies offer the most flexibility in detection
and documentation methods for ELISA because of the variety of substrates available
for chromogenic, fluorescent and chemiluminescent imaging. The most commonly used
enzyme labels used for ELISA are horseradish peroxidase (HRP) and alkaline
phosphatase (AP). There are a large variety of substrates available for performing
ELISA with an HRP or AP conjugates. The substrate choice depends upon the desired
assay sensitivity and the instrumentation available for signal-detection. In
addition, fluorescent tags, radioactive tags and other alternatives to
enzyme-based detection methods can be used for plate-based ELISAs.
Although chromogenic ELISA substrates are not as sensitive as fluorescent or
chemiluminescent substrates, they are economical and still enable kinetic studies.
Furthermore, chromogenic ELISA substrates are detected with standard absorbance
plate readers that are common in many laboratories. In contrast, fluorescent ELISA
substrates require a fluorescent plate reader or scanner with appropriate filters
for the excitation and emission wavelengths of the detected fluorophores.
Chemiluminescent substrates can be detected by various means including digital
camera systems although they are best used with a luminometer. However, the signal
intensity can vary more with chemiluminescent substrates compared to other
substrates. This may be problematic for high-throughput assays requiring accurate
measurement across a large number of plates.
The western blot (sometimes called the protein immunoblot) is a widely used
analytical technique performed to detect specific proteins in a sample of tissue
homogenate or extract. It uses gel electrophoresis to separate native or denatured
proteins either dependent on the length of the polypeptide chain (denaturing
conditions) or on the structure and charge of proteins (native/ non-denaturing
conditions). This technique provides information about protein molecular weight and
presence of different protein isoforms (e.g., glycosylation) of the proteins under
study. Following electrophoresis, the proteins are transferred to a membrane
(typically nitrocellulose or PVDF), where they are probed (detected) using antibodies
specific to the target proteins.
By far the most common type of gel electrophoresis is Sodium dodecyl sulfate
polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). This method uses polyacrylamide gels
and buffers containing sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) to analyze and isolate small
amounts of protein. During SDS-PAGE, proteins are denatured and coated with detergent
by heating in the presence of SDS and a reducing agent. The SDS coating gives the
protein a high net negative charge that is proportional to the length of the
polypeptide chain and denatures the protein by interfering with the non-covalent
interactions (e.g., ionic, hydrophobic) that stabilize protein structure. The sample
is loaded on a polyacrylamide gel, and high voltage is applied, causing the proteins
to migrate as unfolded peptide chains toward the positive electrode (anode). SDS-PAGE
is commonly performed in reducing conditions (e.g., presence of DTT or
beta-mercaptoethanol) in order to reduce the disulfide bonds found within some
proteins and to facilitate protein denaturation.
Since the proteins have a net negative charge that is proportional to their size,
proteins are separated solely on the basis of their molecular mass—a result of the
sieving effect of the gel matrix. The molecular mass of a protein can be estimated by
comparing the gel mobility of a band with those of protein standards. Sharp protein
bands are achieved by using a discontinuous gel system, having stacking and
separating gel layers that differ in either salt concentration or pH or both (Hanes,
1981).
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- SDS-polyacrylamide gel running 1X buffer
- loading 2X buffer
- trichloroacetic acid (TCA) (optional)
- acetone, ice-cold (optional)
- pre-cast acrylamide gels (gradient of defined percentage) –or–
- acrylamide solution, 40%
- upper gel 4X buffer
- lower gel 4X buffer
- ammonium persulfate, 10%
- TEMED
This gel system uses the method described by Laemmli (Laemmli, 1970). Formulations
for preparing resolving and stacking minigels are provided in Tables 11.4 and 11.5.
The amounts of reagents indicated in Tables 11.4 and 11.5 are sufficient to prepare
two 7 × 10cm gels, 0.75–1.00mm thick. Add ammonium persulfate and TEMED just prior to
pouring the gel, as these reagents promote and catalyze polymerization of acrylamide.
Pour the resolving gel mix into assembled gel plates, leaving sufficient space at the
top for the stacking gel to be added later. Gently overlay the gel mix with 0.1% SDS,
and allow the gel to polymerize for at least 15–30 minutes. After polymerization,
remove the SDS overlay, and rinse the surface of the resolving gel with water to
remove any unpolymerized acrylamide. Rinse one more time with a small volume of
stacking gel buffer. Fill the remaining space with the stacking gel solution, and
insert the comb immediately. After the stacking gel has polymerized, remove the comb,
and rinse the wells with water to remove unpolymerized acrylamide. At least 1cm of
stacking gel should be present between the bottom of the loading wells and the
resolving gel.
| Table 11.4. Formulation for Stacking Gel. |
| Component |
Volume |
| upper gel 4X buffer |
2.5ml |
| water |
6.6ml |
| acrylamide solution, 40% |
0.8ml |
| APS, 10% 1
|
100μl |
| TEMED 2
|
10μl |
1ammonium persulfate (always prepare fresh)
2N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylenediamine
| Table 11.5. Formulation for Resolving Gel. |
|
Volume for Different Percentages of Acrylamide |
| Component |
8% |
10% |
12% |
15% |
20% |
| lower gel 4X buffer |
2.5ml |
2.5ml |
2.5ml |
2.5ml |
2.5ml |
| water |
5.4ml |
4.9ml |
4.4ml |
3.65ml |
2.4ml |
| acrylamide solution, 40% |
2.0ml |
2.5ml |
3.0ml |
3.75ml |
5.0ml |
| APS, 10%1
|
50.0μl |
50.0μl |
50.0μl |
50.0μl |
50.0μl |
| TEMED 2
|
5.0μl |
5.0μl |
5.0μl |
5.0μl |
5.0μl |
1ammonium persulfate (always prepare fresh)
2N,N,N′,N′-tetramethylethylenediamine
Prepare Samples
- Add an equal volume of loading 2X buffer to the sample.
- Incubate the sample at 95°C for 2–5 minutes, mix by vortexing and load onto
the gel.
Optional Protein Precipitation
- If the sample is very dilute or contains salts that may interfere with gel
analysis, the protein can be precipitated and resuspended prior to SDS-PAGE
analysis.
Note: The precipitated protein is denatured and needs to be resuspended in a
detergent buffer, a chaotropic salt or an organic solvent.
- Add 150µl of dilute protein to a microcentrifuge tube, add 600µl of
methanol, and vortex. .
- Add 150µl of chloroform, and vortex.
- Add 450ul of Nuclease-Free Water, and vortex.
- Centrifuge for 2 minutes at 14,000 × g. An interface
will form between the aqueous (top) and organic phases. The protein is in the
interface layer.
- Carefully remove the top aqueous layer. The salts, detergents, sugars are in
the aqueous layer. Note: There is no need to remove the entire aqueous layer.
Remove as much as possible with out disturbing the interface layer.
- Add 600µl of methanol and vortex.
- Centrifuge the sample at 14,000 × g for 5–10 minutes.
The protein will form a tight pellet.
- Remove the supernatant and air dry the pellet.
- Resuspend the protein in a suitable volume (15–20µl) of loading 1X buffer
(prepared by adding an equal volume of water to loading 2X buffer).
- Incubate the sample at 95°C for 2–5 minutes, mix by vortexing and load onto
the gel.
Blotting
Following electrophoresis and before detection, the proteins must be
transferred from the gel onto a nitrocellulose or polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF)
membrane. The membrane is placed on top of the gel, and a stack of filter papers
placed on top of that. When the gel/filter/paper stack is placed in a buffer
solution, capillary action pulls the proteins out of the gel and into the
membrane. Alternatively, the proteins can be transferred by electroblotting, which
uses an electric current to pull proteins from the gel into the membrane. With
either blotting method, the proteins maintain the relative position they had
within the gel but now they are embedded in a thin surface layer that is more
suitable for detection. Both membrane material have nonspecific protein binding
properties (i.e. binds all proteins equally well). Protein binding is based upon
hydrophobic and ionic interactions between the membrane and protein.
Blocking
The nonspecific protein binding properties of membranes require that the
membrane is blocked prior to addition of any antibodies. Blocking this nonspecific
binding is achieved by placing the membrane in a dilute solution of protein such
as 3-5% Bovine serum albumin (BSA; Cat.# W3841) or
non-fat dry milk in Tris-Buffered Saline (TBS), with a small percentage of
detergent such as Tween 20 or Triton X-100. The protein in this dilute solution
attaches to the membrane where ever the target proteins have not attached. As a
result, when the antibody is added, there is no where for it to attach other than
the binding sites of the target protein. This reduces background in the final
western blot, leading to clearer results, and fewer false positive results.
Detection
Following blotting, the membrane is probed for the protein of interest.
Typically, this is done using a primary antibody specific to the protein of
interest and a secondary antibody that is directed towards a species-specific
portion of the primary antibody. This secondary antibody is modified so that it is
linked to a reporter enzyme that will produce color when exposed to an appropriate
substrate. Although this two-step process is the approach most commonly used,
there are now one-step detection methods available for certain applications.
While there are many different tags that can be conjugated to a secondary or
primary antibody, the detection method used will limit the choice of what can be
used in a Western blotting assay. Radioisotopes were used extensively in the past,
but they are expensive, have a short shelf-life, offer no improvement in
signal:noise ratio and require special handling and disposal. Alternative labels
are enzymes and fluorophores.
Enzymatic labels are most commonly used for Western blotting ans can be
extremely sensitive when optimized with an appropriate substrate. Alkaline
phosphatase (AP) and horseradish peroxidase (HRP) are the two most commonly used
enzymes. An array of chromogenic, fluorogenic and chemiluminescent substrates are
available for use with either enzyme. AP catalyzes colorimetric reactions using
substrates such as the Western Blue® Substrate
(standard BCIP/NBT, Cat.# S3841). It can also drive
the chemiluminescent detection reactions involving substrates such as
3-(2´-spiroadamantane)-4-methyl-4-(3´´ phosphoryloxyphenyl-1, 2-dioxetane
(AMPPD®). AP conjugated antibodies offer the
advantage that their reaction rates remain linear so that sensitivity can be
increased by letting the reaction to proceed for a longer time. Unfortunately,
this increased reaction time often leads to high background signal resulting in
low signal:noise ratios.
In contrast, Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) conjugated antibodies offer higher
specificity compared to AP conjugates due the smaller size of HRP enzyme and
compatibility with conjugation reactions. In addition, the high activity rate,
good stability, low cost and wide availability of substrates make HRP the enzyme
of choice for most applications.
Although, enzyme conjugated antibodies offer the most flexibility in detection
and documentation methods for Western blotting because of the variety of
substrates available, the simplest detection system is chromogenic substrates such
as Western Blue®Substrate (Cat.# S3841). Chromogenic
substrates allow direct visualization of blot development but lack the sensitivity
of enzyme conjugated methods. Unfortunately, chromogenic substrates tend to fade
as the blot dries, so it is important to make a permanent image of the blot.
Chemiluminescent blotting substrates such as the ECL Western blot substrate
(Cat. W1001) are different from other substrates because the signal is a product
of the enzyme-substrate reaction that persists only as long as the reaction is
occurring. As a result, the signal is lost once the substrate is used up or the
enzyme looses activity. However, in well-optimized assays with proper antibody
dilutions and sufficient substrate, the reaction can produce stable light output
for several hours.
Using fluorophore-conjugated antibodies in a immunoassays requires fewer steps
because there is no substrate development step. While the protocol is shorter,
special equipment is needed to detect and document the fluorescent signal. Recent
advances in digital imaging and the development of new fluorophores has improved
the sensitivity and increase the popularity of using fluorescent probes for
Western blotting. Finally, this method has the added advantage of multiplex
compatibility (using more than one fluorophore in the same experiment).
More information and detailed protocol information is available in Technical
Manual #TM045.
Protocol
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- 1M NaOH/2% H2O2
- 25% TCA/2% casamino acids (Difco brand, Vitamin Assay Grade)
- 5% TCA
- Whatman GF/A glass fiber filter (Whatman)
- acetone
- Whatman 3MM filter paper
- 30% acrylamide solution
- separating gel 4X buffer
- stacking gel 4X buffer
- SDS sample buffer
- SDS polyacrylamide gels
- 50mM DTT
- Blot-Qualified BSA (Cat.# W3841)
- PVDF membrane
- iBlot
- SP-antibod
- TBST buffer
- Add 1µl of the standard, unlabeled translation reaction to 19µl of 1X SDS
loading dye with 50mM DTT.
Note: Include a no template control on the gel to identify background
bands.
- Incubate at 95°C for 5 minutes. Centrifuge briefly to collect the contents
in the bottom of the tube.
- Load 20µl onto a 4–20% gradient Tris-glycine SDS polyacrylamide gel.
- Following electrophoresis, remove the gel and place it in water.
- Transfer the proteins to a PVDF membrane using a Western blotting system
(e.g., iBlot® System; Invitrogen).
- Block the membrane using 15ml of 5% Blot-Qualified BSA in TBST (1X TBS +
0.1% Tween® 20). Incubate for 1 hour with gentle
shaking.
- Dilute your primary antibody in 1X TBST.
Note: We recommend that you titrate your primary antibody dilutions to
determine what dilution produces the best results for your protein.
- Following incubation, remove the blocking solution from the membrane, and
add 15ml of diluted primary antibody.
- Incubate the membrane with the primary antibody at room temperature for 1
hour with gentle shaking.
- Remove the primary antibody solution, and wash the membrane with 15ml of 1X
TBST for 5 minutes with gentle shaking.
- Repeat the wash 5 more times for a total of six washes.
- Dilute your secondary antibody 1:2,500 in 1X TBST.
- Following that last wash, remove buffer from the membrane and add 15ml of
diluted secondary antibody.
- Incubate the membrane with the secondary antibody for 1 hour with gentle
shaking.
- Following the incubation, remove the secondary antibody solution, and wash
the membrane with 15ml of 1X TBST for five minutes. Repeat for a total of six
washes.
- Proceed to the detection method appropriate for your secondary
antibody.
return to top of page
Mass spectrometry is a powerful tool for protein analysis and the major technique
used to study proteins in the field of proteomics (Mann et al.
2001). Mass spectrometry can be used to characterize recombinant proteins, identify
unknown proteins and detect and characterize posttranslational modifications.
One method of protein identification uses enzymatic digestion followed by mass
spectrometry analysis. In this procedure, complex protein mixtures such as cell extracts
are resolved by gel electrophoresis, and the band or spot of interest is excised from
the gel and digested with trypsin. Trypsin is a serine protease that specifically
cleaves at the carboxylic side of lysine and arginine residues. The distribution of Lys
and Arg residues in proteins is such that trypsin digestion yields peptides of molecular
weights that can be analyzed by mass spectrometry. The pattern of peptides obtained is
used to identify the protein. Database searches can then be performed, using the masses
of the identified peptides to identify the protein(s) resolved on the gel (Mann
et al. 2001).
The stringent specificity of trypsin is essential for protein identification. Native
trypsin is subject to autolysis, generating pseudotrypsin, which exhibits a broadened
specificity, including a chymotrypsin-like activity (Keil-Dlouha et
al. 1971). Such autolysis products would result in additional peptide
fragments that could interfere with database analysis of the mass of fragments detected
by mass spectrometry.
Trypsin Gold, Mass Spectrometry Grade (Cat.# V5280),
provides maximum specificity. Lysine residues in the porcine trypsin are modified by
reductive methylation, yielding a highly active and stable molecule that is extremely
resistant to autolytic digestion (Rice et al. 1977). The
specificity of the purified trypsin is further improved by TPCK treatment, which
inactivates chymotrypsin. The treated trypsin is then purified by affinity
chromatography and lyophilized to yield Trypsin Gold, Mass Spectrometry Grade. More
information and a detailed protocol are available in Technical Bulletin TB309.
Numerous protocols for in-gel protein digestion have been described (Flannery
et al. 1989; Shevchenko et al. 1996;
Rosenfeld et al. 1992). The following procedure has been used
successfully by Promega scientists.
Materials Required:
(see Composition of Solutions section)
- Trypsin Gold, Mass Spectrometry Grade (Cat.#
V5280) and protocol
- SimplyBlue™ SafeStain (Invitrogen Cat.# LC6060)
- trifluoroacetic acid (TFA)
- acetonitrile (ACN)
- 200mM NH4HCO3 buffer (pH
7.8)
- NANOpure® water
- ZipTip® scx pipette tips (Millipore Cat.#
ZTSCXS096)
- α-cyano-4-hydroxycinnamic acid (CHCA)
- MALDI target
- ZipTip® C18 pipette tips (Millipore Cat.#
ZTC18S096)
- Separate protein samples by electrophoresis on an SDS-Tris-Glycine gel.
Note: Other gel systems and staining reagents can be used for in-gel digestions
but should be tested to ensure compatibility with the protein of interest
and detection system being used.
- Rinse the gel three times, for 5 minutes each rinse, in
NANOpure® water. Stain for 1 hour in SimplyBlue™
SafeStain (Invitrogen Corporation) at room temperature with gentle agitation.
When staining is complete, discard the staining solution.
- Destain the gel for 1 hour in NANOpure® water at
room temperature with gentle agitation. When destaining is complete, discard
the solution.
- Using a clean razor blade, cut the protein bands of interest from the gel,
eliminating as much polyacrylamide as possible. Place the gel slices into a
0.5ml microcentrifuge tube that has been prewashed twice with 50% acetonitrile
(ACN)/0.1% trifluoroacetic acid (TFA).
- Destain the gel slices twice with 0.2ml of 100mM
NH4HCO3/50% ACN for 45 minutes
each treatment, at 37°C to remove the SimplyBlue™ SafeStain.
- Dehydrate the gel slices for 5 minutes at room temperature in 100μl of 100%
ACN. At this point the gel slices will be much smaller than their original size
and will be whitish or opaque in appearance.
- Dry the gel slices in a Speed Vac® concentrator
for 10–15 minutes at room temperature to remove the ACN.
- Resuspend the Trypsin Gold at 1μg/μl in 50mM acetic acid, then dilute in
40mM NH4HCO3/10% ACN to 20μg/ml.
Preincubate the gel slices in a minimal volume (10–20μl) of the trypsin
solution at room temperature (do not exceed 30°C) for 1 hour. The slices will
rehydrate during this time. If the gel slices appear white or opaque after one
hour, add an additional 10–20μl of trypsin and incubate for another hour at
room temperature.
- Add enough digestion buffer (40mM
NH4HCO3/10% ACN) to completely
cover the gel slices. Cap the tubes tightly to avoid evaporation. Incubate
overnight at 37°C.
- Incubate the gel slice digests with 150μl of
NANOpure® water for 10 minutes, with frequent vortex
mixing. Remove and save the liquid in a new microcentrifuge tube.
- Extract the gel slice digests twice, with 50μl of 50% ACN/5% TFA (with
mixing) for 60 minutes each time, at room temperature.
- Pool all extracts (from Steps 10 and 11), and dry in a Speed
Vac® concentrator at room temperature for 2–4
hours (do not exceed 30°C).
- Purify and concentrate the extracted peptides using
ZipTip® pipette tips (Millipore Corporation)
following the manufacturer’s directions.
- The peptides eluted from the ZipTip® tips are now
ready for mass spectrometric analysis.
In general, proteins require denaturation and disulfide bond cleavage for
enzymatic digestion to reach completion (Wilkinson, 1986). If partial digestion of a
native protein is desired, begin this protocol at Step 3.
- Dissolve the target protein in 6M guanidine HCl (or 6–8M urea or 0.1% SDS),
50mM Tris-HCl (pH 8), 2–5mM DTT (or β-mercaptoethanol).
- Heat at 95°C for 15–20 minutes or at 60°C for 45–60 minutes. Allow the
reaction to cool.
- For denatured proteins, add 50mM
NH4HCO3 (pH 7.8) or 50mM
Tris-HCl, 1mM CaCl2 (pH 7.6), until the guanidine HCl or
urea concentration is less than 1M. If SDS is used, dilution is not necessary.
For digestion of native proteins, dissolve in buffer with a pH between 7 and
9.
- Add Trypsin Gold to a final protease:protein ratio of 1:100 to 1:20 (w/w).
Incubate at 37°C for at least 1 hour. Remove an aliquot, and chill the
remainder of the reaction on ice or freeze at –20°C.
- Terminate the protease activity in the aliquot from Step 4 by adding an
inhibitor. Alternatively, precipitate the aliquot by adding TCA to 10% final
concentration. The reaction can also be terminated by freezing at –20°C.
Trypsin can also be inactivated by lowering the pH of the reaction below pH 4.
Trypsin will regain activity as the pH is raised above pH 4 (Wilkinson, 1986).
Note: The following are general trypsin inhibitors: Antipain (50μg/ml),
antithrombin (1unit/ml), APMSF (0.01–0.04mg/ml), aprotinin (0.06–2μg/ml),
leupeptin (0.5μg/ml), PMSF (17–170µg/ml), TLCK (37–50μg/ml), trypsin
inhibitors (10–100μg/ml).
- Determine the extent of digestion by subjecting the aliquot in Steps 4 and 5
to reverse phase HPLC or SDS-PAGE.
- If no inhibitors were added to the remainder of the reaction and further
proteolysis is required, incubate at 37°C until the desired digestion is
obtained (Sheer, 1994). Reducing the temperature will decrease the digestion
rate. Incubations of up to 24 hours may be required, depending on the nature of
the protein. With long incubations, take precautions to avoid bacterial
contamination.
Additional Literature for Trypsin Gold, Mass Spectometry Grade
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
TB309
Trypsin Gold, Mass Spectometry Grade, Technical Bulletin
Markillie and associates describe a simple exogenous protein complex purification
and identification method that can be easily automated (Markillie et
al. 2005). The method uses MagneHis™ Ni Particles (Cat.#
V8560, V8565) to pull down target proteins, followed by denaturing
elution, trypsin digestion and mass spectrometry analysis (Figure 11.15).
Use of alternative enzymes for protein digestion increases the confidence in mass
spectrometry data by confirming the protein sequence and aids in the mapping of
post-translational modifications (PTMs). Endoproteinases Asp-N and Glu-C have been
used for protein characterization for over 30 years and have gained importance
recently due to advancements in mass spectrometry techniques. Asp-N preferentially
cleaves proteins at the N-terminus of aspartic and cysteic acid (Drapeau 1980;
Ingrosso et al., 1989; Geu et al., 1990).
Glu-C cleaves at the C-terminus of glutamic and aspartic residues (Drapeau, 1972;
Drapeau, 1978; Drapeau, 1977). Due to their specific cleavage sites, these
proteinases create unique peptide fragments that are well-suited for mass spectrometry analysis.
Comparing protein sequences or mapping data from Asp-N or Glu-C digests to that of
other proteinases promotes higher confidence in data (Fischer and Poetsch, 2006; Wu
and MacCoss, 2002; Swaney et al., 2010; Choudhary et
al., 2003; Elenitoba-Johnson et al., 2006;
Biringer et al., 2006).
Protein digestion is required for either the bottom-up or middle-down approach to
protein analysis. In the bottom-up approach, the optimal peptide size range for
analysis is 600–5,000Da. Recent advancements in mass spectrometry have expanded the
peptide size range to 600–20,000Da. These advancements have promoted the middle-down
approach to protein analysis (Young et al., 2010; Mann and
Kelleher, 2008; Meyer et al. , 2010; Cannon et
al., 2010; Swaney et al., 2010). However, some
peptides still may fall above or below the desired peptide size range. This results
in decreased protein coverage and incomplete data collection.
To increase protein coverage, additional proteinases have been used. Using
alternative proteinases individually or in combination with other proteinases creates
a unique peptide map that may include sequences not seen in standard trypsin digestions.
Overlaying peptide mass data obtained from digestion with alternative proteinases increases
protein coverage and overall confidence in protein identification. When alternative
enzymes are used, larger peptides are cleaved into smaller fragments, which are more
manageable for the instrumentation. In addition, protein sections cleaved into
peptides too small for analysis by one enzyme might be cleaved into larger peptides
by a different enzyme. Alternative proteinases also help to overcome incomplete
digestion caused by PTMs, which prevent the proteinases from accessing that
particular site. By using alternative enzymes, the protein might be cleaved at sites
further away from the PTM. The examples above show that alternative proteinases are
beneficial to protein analysis (Young et al., 2010; Mann and
Kelleher, 2008; Meyer et al. , 2010; Cannon et
al., 2010; Swaney et al., 2010).
Asp-N and Glu-C Proteases
Asp-N (Cat.# V1621) is a metalloprotease
purified from Pseudomonas fragi. Asp-N cleaves at the
N-terminus of aspartic and cysteic acid residues with high specificity (Drapeau
1980; Ingrosso et al., 1989; Geu et al.,
1990). Cysteic acid residues are an oxidized form of the cysteine residues.
Additional cleavage has been reported at glutamic residues; however, the rate of
cleavage at aspartic acid is 2,000-fold higher than at the glutamyl residues
(Ingrosso et al., 1989; Geu et al.,
1990). Glu-C (Cat. # V1651) is a serine proteinase
purified from Staphylococcus aureus V8. It cleaves
specifically at the C-terminus of glutamic and aspartic acids (Drapeau, 1972;
Drapeau, 1978; Drapeau, 1977). Buffer composition affects the specificity of
Glu-C. In phosphate buffers, both glutamic and aspartic residues are cleaved;
however, in ammonium bicarbonate and ammonium acetate buffers (pH 4.0), only the
glutamic residues are cleaved (Drapeau, 1977)
Additional Literature for Asp-N and Glu-C Proteases
Technical Bulletins and Manuals
9PIV162
Asp-N Sequencing Grade Product Information
9PIV165
Glu-C Sequencing Grade Product Information
Promega Publications
tpub_042
Using Endoproteinases Asp-N and Glu-C to Improve Protein
Characterization
return to top of page
MagneHis™ Binding/Wash Buffer (pH 7.5)
MagneHis™ Elution Buffer (pH 7.5)
MagneHis™ Binding/Wash Buffer for Denaturing Conditions (pH 7.5)
2–8M
guanidine-HCl or urea
MagneHis™ Elution Buffer for Denaturing Conditions (pH 7.5)
2–8M
guanidine-HCl or urea
4X SDS gel-loading buffer
SDS gel-loading buffer lacking dithiothreitol can be stored at room
temperature. Dithiothreitol should be added from a 1M stock just before the buffer
is used.
MagZ™ Binding/Wash Buffer (pH 7.4)
Binding Buffer (HisLink™)
Elution Buffer (pH 7.5) (HisLink™)
MagneGST™ Binding/Wash Buffer
Elution Buffer (MagneGST™ System)
50mM
glutathione (pH 7.0–8.0)
The glutathione provided has a pH value between 7.0 and 8.0. If a different
source of glutathione is being used, adjust the pH to 7.0–8.0 before adding the
Tris-HCl (pH 8.1). The glutathione solution has little buffering capacity at pH
7.0–8.0, so take care when adjusting the pH. Failure to adjust the pH of
glutathione will decrease the pH of the elution buffer, especially when final
glutathione concentrations are ≥50mM.
1X SDS gel-loading buffer
SDS gel-loading buffer lacking dithiothreitol can be stored at room
temperature. Dithiothreitol should be added from a 1M stock just before the buffer
is used.
acrylamide solution, 40%
Dissolve in 100ml of water.
gel running buffer
Adjust pH to 8.3.
TBE 10X buffer (1L)
Add components in the order listed above to ~800ml of distilled water. Add
slightly less than the total amount of boric acid. Mix until completely dissolved,
check pH and adjust to 8.3 with boric acid. Bring final volume to 1L with
distilled water.
T4 Polynucleotide Kinase 10X Buffer
Coomassie® Blue staining solution
0.25%
(w/v) Coomassie® Blue R-250
Gel Shift Binding 5X Buffer
0.25mg/ml
poly(dI-dC)•poly(dI-dC)
return to top of page
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