生物化学


分类

现刊
0 Q&A 1235 Views Sep 5, 2025

OtUBD is a high-affinity ubiquitin-binding domain (UBD) derived from a large protein produced by the microorganism Orientia tsutsugamushi. The following protocol describes a step-by-step process for the enrichment of ubiquitinated proteins from baker's yeast and mammalian cell lysates using OtUBD. The OtUBD affinity resin can strongly enrich both mono- and poly-ubiquitinated proteins from crude lysates. The protocol further describes the use of different buffer formulations to specifically enrich for proteins covalently modified by ubiquitin with or without proteins that associate with them. Combining different OtUBD-mediated enrichment protocols with liquid chromatography–tandem mass spectrometry (LC–MS/MS) helps distinguish the pool of covalently ubiquitinated proteins (the ubiquitinome) from ubiquitin- or ubiquitinated protein-interacting proteins (the ubiquitin interactome). The OtUBD tool described in the protocol has been used successfully with downstream applications such as immunoblotting and differential proteomics. It provides researchers with a versatile and economical tool for the study of ubiquitin biology.

0 Q&A 192 Views Sep 5, 2025

The phototransduction cascade allows photoreceptors to detect light across a wide range of intensities without saturation, with cGMP serving as the second messenger and calcium feedback as the key regulatory mechanism. While experimental evidence suggests that cAMP may also play a role in modulating this cascade, such regulation would necessitate rapid changes in cAMP levels on a timescale of seconds. However, data on the dynamics of intracellular cAMP changes in photoreceptors remain scarce, primarily due to the limitations of conventional fluorescence-based methods in this specialized sensory system. To address this gap, we developed a methodology combining rapid cryofixation of retinal samples following light stimulation with the isolation of outer segment preparations. The rapid cryofixation setup comprises six computer-controlled sections, each with a high-speed stepper motor-driven lever that rapidly moves the specimen in a 180° arc within ~80 ms to press it against a liquid nitrogen-cooled copper cylinder for fixation. Using highly sensitive metabolomics techniques, we measured cAMP levels in these samples. This approach enables the investigation of rapid cAMP dynamics and its potential regulatory role in phototransduction, providing a foundation for understanding the interplay between cAMP and PKA signaling in photoreceptor function.

0 Q&A 253 Views Sep 5, 2025

Rhamnogalacturonan-II (RG-II) is one of the least studied domains of pectin, primarily due to its low abundance, the lack of reliable antibodies, and the complexity of its structure. The present study builds upon existing protocols and procedures used to analyse RG-II in tissues where it is more abundant, combining and adapting them for the isolation of RG-II from Arabidopsis seed mucilage—a structure previously thought to lack RG-II. By applying these adapted methods, we first confirmed the presence of RG-II in seed mucilage and subsequently succeeded in isolating it from a tissue where it is typically present in low abundance, thereby enabling future studies on this previously overlooked component.

0 Q&A 235 Views Sep 5, 2025

Phospholipids are major structural and regulatory elements of biological membranes and are involved in many different cellular and physiological processes. In this protocol, we provide an easy, cost-effective, and efficient method to obtain an overview of the phospholipid composition using high-performance thin layer chromatography (HPTLC). While the currently known phospholipid separation methods based on HPTLC display co-migration of certain lipid classes, the method we describe here allows the separation of all phospholipid classes, including anionic phospholipids in plant samples. This protocol combines elements of the classical Vitiello and Touchstone solvent systems to optimize phospholipid separation in a scaled pattern. Here, we provide a full characterization of this method, including statistical analyses of the retention factor of each phospholipid to show the robustness of the method and its efficiency in separating all phospholipid classes of a biological sample.

0 Q&A 253 Views Sep 5, 2025

Adult muscle stem cells (MuSCs) are the key cellular source for regenerating skeletal muscle in vertebrates. MuSCs are typically identified in skeletal muscle by the expression of the paired box protein 7 (PAX7) protein. Here, we developed a combined RNA fluorescent in situ hybridization (FISH) using RNAscope technology and an immunofluorescence (IF) protocol for the simultaneous detection of Pax7 mRNA and PAX7 protein in individual MuSCs in vivo. Interestingly, we show that while most PAX7+ (protein) MuSCs express Pax7 mRNA, there is a subset of Pax7+ (mRNA) cells that do not express PAX7 protein. Altogether, we developed a combined FISH/IF protocol that allows for the co-detection of mRNA and protein in MuSCs in vivo, a strategy that can be applied to any target gene. The functional significance of the Pax7-expressing subset of cells lacking PAX7 protein prior to injury remains unknown.

往期刊物
0 Q&A 1052 Views Aug 20, 2025

The Sox (SRY-related HMG-box) protein family plays a crucial role in cellular differentiation, development, and gene regulation, with the HMG (high-mobility group) domain responsible for DNA binding and transcriptional regulation. Proteins in the SOX gene family contain an HMG domain that shares 50% homology with the HMG domain of the sex-determining factor SRY gene. The SOX gene family comprises 30 proteins, which are classified into 10 groups (A–H). As a member of this family, hSox2 has been shown to be involved in various biological processes, but its specific function remains unclear. Previous studies have used eukaryotic expression systems, GST-tag purification, and bacterial inclusion body refolding techniques to produce Sox family proteins. However, these methods are often limited by issues such as low yield, incorrect folding, or inefficient purification, restricting their application in functional and structural studies. In this study, a prokaryotic expression system for the hSox2-HMG domain was constructed using the pET22b vector and Escherichia coli BL21(DE3) as the host strain. Protein expression was induced by IPTG, and initial purification was performed using Ni-NTA affinity chromatography, followed by ultrafiltration concentration and size exclusion chromatography to improve purity. By optimizing lysis and elution conditions, we successfully obtained hSox2-HMG protein with high expression levels and purity. This method provides a cost-effective and scalable strategy for hSox2-HMG production, ensuring high purity and correct folding of the protein. The optimized experimental protocol lays a foundation for structural and functional studies of hSox2-HMG.

0 Q&A 806 Views Aug 20, 2025

Regulated IRE1-dependent decay (RIDD) is a critical cellular mechanism mediated by the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress sensor IRE1α, which cleaves a variety of RNA targets to regulate ER homeostasis. Current in vitro assays to study IRE1α activity largely rely on synthetic or in vitro transcribed RNA substrates, which may not fully replicate the physiological complexities of native RNA molecules. Here, we present a comprehensive protocol to assess IRE1α-dependent RNA cleavage activity using total RNA isolated directly from mouse tissues. This protocol provides a step-by-step guide for tissue collection, RNA isolation, an ex vivo RIDD assay, cDNA synthesis, and subsequent RT-PCR analysis of target mRNA cleavage products. Key reagents include active IRE1α protein, the RIDD-specific inhibitor 4μ8C, and target-specific primers for RIDD-regulated genes such asBloc1s1 and Col6a1. Quantitative assessment is achieved using agarose gel electrophoresis and imaging software. This methodology enables the study of IRE1α's RNA cleavage activity under conditions that closely mimic in vivo environments, providing a more physiologically relevant approach to understanding the role of RIDD in cellular and tissue-specific contexts.

0 Q&A 870 Views Aug 20, 2025

Pyruvate kinase M2 (PKM2) is a key glycolytic enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of phosphoenolpyruvate (PEP) to pyruvate, producing ATP in the final step of glycolysis. Unlike other isoforms, PKM2 is uniquely regulated, shifting between active tetramers and less active dimers to balance energy production with biosynthetic demands. This flexibility is exploited in cancer cells to support the Warburg effect and anabolic growth. Additionally, PKM2 can translocate to the nucleus and act as a transcriptional co-activator, influencing gene expression and tumor progression. To facilitate functional studies of PKM2, we present a robust and reproducible protocol for its expression, purification, and enzymatic characterization. PKM2 is expressed in E. coli and purified via Ni-NTA affinity and size-exclusion chromatography to ensure high purity and proper folding. Enzymatic activity is measured using a lactate dehydrogenase (LDH)-coupled assay that tracks NADH oxidation at 340 nm, allowing sensitive kinetic analysis under various conditions, including different PEP concentrations, pH levels, and presence of the allosteric activator fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP). This non-radioactive, high-resolution method is suitable for analyzing PKM2 regulation, post-translational modifications, and mutant variants, as well as for screening potential therapeutic modulators, providing a valuable tool for cancer metabolism research.

0 Q&A 780 Views Aug 20, 2025

Zinc-finger (ZF) arrays are compact, sequence-specific polynucleotide-binding domains, which have been used to target the delivery of diverse effector domains, enabling applications such as gene identification, localization, regulation, and editing. To facilitate in vitro applications of ZF arrays, we have developed a general method for their expression and purification. Here, we describe a protocol involving two chromatographic steps that yields homogeneous and functional ZF arrays in milligram quantities.

0 Q&A 462 Views Aug 5, 2025

Oxidative protein damage is important in various biological processes and age-related diseases. Protein carbonylation is the predominant and most frequently studied form of protein oxidation. It is most frequently detected following its derivatization with 2,4-dinitrophenylhydrazine (DNPH) hapten, followed by its detection with an anti-DNP antibody. However, when used to detect protein carbonylation by western blotting, this method suffers from diminished sensitivity, distortion of protein migration patterns, and unsatisfactory representation of low-abundance proteins. This is due to the poor solubility of DNPH in typical buffer solutions, the acidic protein precipitation due to the use of strong acid for its dissolution, the instability in solution, and the distorted protein migration patterns introduced by an additional salt content generated by the required pH adjustment prior to sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). To address the DNPH method limitations, a new Oxime blot technique was developed. This method is based on forming the stable oxime bonds between the protein carbonyl groups and biotin-aminooxy probe in the presence of a p-phenylenediamine (pPDA) catalyst at neutral pH conditions. The derivatization reaction reaches a plateau within 3 h. It ensures efficient and complete derivatization of carbonylated proteins, which are separated by SDS-PAGE without additional manipulation and detected with avidin-HRP and enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL) in western blotting. The Oxime blot protocol allows researchers to reliably and sensitively detect carbonylated proteins and provides a valuable tool for studying oxidative stress in diverse biological settings.

0 Q&A 1043 Views Aug 5, 2025

Studying G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) activation of heterotrimeric G proteins is crucial for understanding diverse physiological processes and developing novel therapeutics. Traditional methods to assay GPCR activation of G proteins, including assays of second messengers and biosensors, involve complex or indirect procedures. However, second messengers like cAMP and calcium are not direct readouts of GPCR activity due to signaling crosstalk, while biosensors can have undesired consequences due to structural alteration caused by fluorescent protein insertion. Here, we present a streamlined protocol employing GST-tagged bait proteins and epitope-embedded Gα subunits to achieve direct monitoring of Gα activity within cells. This method involves purification of GST-tagged bait constructs from bacteria and subsequent direct interaction studies with GluGlu-tagged Gα proteins expressed in any human cells of interest by including GST-tagged bait proteins in the cell lysis buffer. The approach enables sensitive detection of activated Gα within cells following extracellular stimulation. Advantages of this protocol include high sensitivity, enhanced monitoring of GPCR signaling dynamics under physiologically relevant conditions with minimum alteration in Gα, and the ability to distinguish between highly homologous isoforms within the same Gα family.

0 Q&A 931 Views Aug 5, 2025

Protein synthesis and degradation (i.e., turnover) forms an important part of protein homeostasis and has been implicated in many age-associated diseases. Different cellular locations, such as organelles and membraneless compartments, often contain individual protein quality control and degradation machineries. Conventional methods to assess protein turnover across subcellular compartments require targeted genetic manipulation or isolation of specific organelles. Here we describe a protocol for simultaneous proteome localization and turnover (SPLAT) analysis, which combines protein turnover measurements with unbiased subcellular spatial proteomics to measure compartment-specific protein turnover rates on a proteome-wide scale. This protocol utilizes dynamic stable isotope labeling of amino acids in cell culture (dynamic SILAC) to resolve the temporal information of protein turnover and multi-step differential ultracentrifugation to assign proteins to multiple subcellular localizations. We further incorporate 2D liquid chromatography fractionation to greatly increase analytical depth while multiplexing with tandem mass tags (TMT) to reduce acquisition time 10-fold. This protocol resolves the spatial and temporal distributions of proteins and can also reveal temporally distinct spatial localizations within a protein pool.

0 Q&A 1512 Views Jul 20, 2025

This manuscript details protocols for the ZnCl2 precipitation-assisted sample preparation (ZASP) for proteomic analysis. By inducing protein precipitation with ZASP precipitation buffer (ZPB, final concentration of ZnCl 2 at 100 mM and 50% methanol), ZASP depletes harsh detergents and impurities, such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), Triton X-100, and urea, at high concentrations in solution from protein solutions prior to trypsin digestion. It is a practical, robust, and cost-effective approach for proteomic sample preparation. It has been observed that 90.2% of the proteins can be recovered from lysates by incubating with an equal volume of ZPB at room temperature for 10 min. In 1 h of data-dependent acquisition (DDA) analysis on an Exploris 480, 4,037 proteins and 25,626 peptides were quantified from 1 μg of mouse small intestine proteins, reaching a peak of 4,500 proteins and up to 30,000 peptides with 5 μg of input. Additionally, ZASP outperformed other common sample preparation methods such as sodium deoxycholate (SDC)-based in-solution digestion, acetone precipitation, filter-aided sample preparation (FASP), and single-pot, solid-phase-enhanced sample preparation (SP3). It demonstrated superior performance in protein (4,456 proteins) and peptide identification (29,871 peptides), lower missing cleavage rates (16.3%), and high reproducibility (Pearson correlation coefficients of 0.96 between replicates) with similar protein distributions and cellular localization patterns. Significantly, the cost of ZASP per sample with 100 μg of protein as input is lower than 30 RMB, including the expense of trypsin.

0 Q&A 871 Views Jul 20, 2025

Cathepsin L (CTSL), a lysosomal cysteine protease belonging to the papain-like protease family, is primarily involved in intracellular protein degradation, antigen processing, and extracellular matrix remodeling. It plays critical roles in pathological conditions, including cancer metastasis, neurodegenerative disorders, and viral infection, due to dysregulated activity or overexpression. Thus, inhibitors targeting CTSL are under investigation for therapeutic applications. Current approaches for identifying CTSL inhibitors predominantly rely on fluorescence-labeled substrates, fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET), and cell-based screening assays. Here, we applied the principle of fluorescence polarization (FP) to the detection of substrate cleavage activity by CTSL through changes in millipolarization unit (mp) values and established a cost-effective, quantitative, reagent- and time-saving inhibitor high-throughput screening (HTS) assay. We also provide detailed steps for the expression and purification of highly active CTSL from eukaryotic cells, which lays a solid foundation for the FP-based assay. A key advantage of this assay lies in its reduced susceptibility to fluorescence interference, as the fluorescein isothiocyanate (FITC) fluorophore exhibits high quantum efficiency with an emission peak at 535 nm—a wavelength range distinct from most naturally occurring fluorescent molecules. The assay’s adaptability to reaction time, temperature, and dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) concentration minimizes false-positive or false-negative results caused by minor experimental inconsistencies, streamlining the screening process. Furthermore, the protocol requires fewer operational steps, reduced incubation time, and lower quantities of CTSL and substrates compared to conventional methods. This rapid, cost-effective, and scalable approach aligns well with the demands of HTS platforms.

0 Q&A 1203 Views Jul 20, 2025

Accurate measurement of protein translation rates is crucial for understanding cellular processes and disease mechanisms. However, existing methods for quantifying translation rates in yeast cells are limited. Here, we present a streamlined protocol for measuring protein translation rates in Saccharomyces cerevisiae using the methionine analog L-azidohomoalanine (AHA), which is the L isoform of this synthetic amino acid, and fluorophore-labeled alkyne dye-based Click chemistry. Our method involves incorporating AHA into newly synthesized proteins, followed by detection using confocal microscopy, flow cytometry, and SDS-PAGE. We validated our protocol by measuring translation rates under various stress conditions, including heat stress, endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress induced by tunicamycin, and translation inhibition by cycloheximide. Confocal microscopy revealed differential AHA incorporation and fluorescence intensity across conditions. Flow cytometry quantitatively confirmed significant increases in translation rates under heat stress and decreases under ER stress compared to unstressed conditions at 6 and 24 h post-treatment. Imaging of gels under fluorescence detectors following SDS-PAGE further visualized newly synthesized proteins, with no detectable translation after cycloheximide treatment. Our protocol offers enhanced precision and selectivity compared to existing methods for mammalian cells and represents the first standardized approach for measuring translation rates in yeast. Despite limitations in required specialized equipment and expertise, this method holds promise for diverse applications in biotechnology and biomedical research, enabling investigations into protein synthesis regulation in yeast systems.