On-Membrane Protein Digestion to Prepare Co-Immunoprecipitated Proteins for Interaction Studies (Scientific Article Protocol) | JoVE | Translated to Japanese (2024)

Encyclopedia of Experiments

Overview

This video demonstrates co-immunoprecipitated protein complexes on a PVDF membrane for protein-protein interaction analysis. The reduced proteins from complexes were treated with trypsin to cleave the individual proteins at the smaller peptides, then, the remaining peptides were extracted from the PVDF membrane. The pulled peptide derived from both proteins in the complex was then dried and resuspended in a low concentration of formic acid for further analysis.

Protocol

1. Immunoprecipitation

NOTE: We used non-sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) lysis buffer and citrate elution, as described in the following sections. However, the use of an alternative in-house immunoprecipitation technique may be also applicable for preparing LC-MS/MS samples.

  1. Transfect cultured cells with vectors encoding an epitope tag alone or a fusion protein. For acquiring representative data, transfer J774 cells (1 x 106) with vectors encoding a green fluorescent protein (GFP) alone or GFP-fused Capn6 (calpain-6 gene) using cationic liposomes.
  2. Conjugate antibody to magnetic beads.
    1. For this purpose, mix anti-GFP antibody (2 μL/reaction) with magnetic beads (25 μL/reaction) in 500 µL of citrate phosphate buffer (24.5 mM citric acid, 51.7 mM dibasic sodium phosphate; pH 5.0) in a 1.5 mL test tube.
    2. Rotate the mixture at 50 rpm for 1 h at room temperature. Then, wash the IgG-conjugated beads three times with citrate phosphate buffer containing 0.1% Polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monolaurate.
  3. Lyse the transfected cells using an appropriate lysis buffer. For acquiring representative data, lyse the transfected cells for 30 min on ice in 400 µL of lysis buffer (50 mM Tris-HCl; pH 7.5, 120 mM NaCl, 0.5% poly(oxyethelene) octylphenyl ether) containing 40 μmol/L phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride, 50 μg/mL leupeptin, 50 μg/mL aprotinin, 200 μmol/L sodium orthovanadate, and 1 mM ethylene glycol tetraacetic acid (EGTA) in 1.5 mL test tubes 24 h after transfection.
  4. Clear the lysate by centrifuging at 15,000 xgfor 5 min and collect the supernatant.
  5. Preclear the lysate. Add unlabeled magnetic beads (25 μL/reaction) in a 1.5 mL-test tube. Wash the beads three times with 500 µL of citrate phosphate buffer. After the removal of the citrate phosphate buffer in the final wash, add the cell lysate over the magnetic beads. Rotate the mixture using a rotator at 50 rpm for 30 min at room temperature.
  6. Place the test tube on a magnetic stand for 5 min for magnetic separation, and collect the cell lysate. Use of the magnetic stand designated by the manufacturer is recommended.
  7. Bind the target proteins to the conjugated beads. Place the immunoglobulin (Ig)G-conjugated beads on a magnetic stand for 5 min for magnetic separation, discard the citrate buffer, and then add the cell lysate to the separated beads.
  8. Rotate the mixture at 50 rpm for 1 h at room temperature.
  9. Separate the target proteins from free non-target proteins. Wash the beads three times using 500 µL of citrate phosphate buffer containing 0.1% Polyoxyethylene (20) sorbitan monolaurate. After the final wash, add 30 µL of citrate buffer (pH 2–3), and incubate for 5 min at room temperature to elute the target proteins.
    NOTE: If recovery from the immunoprecipitation is insufficient, the use of alternative epitope tags, such as FLAG or HIS, may improve the efficiency. If the efficiency of the elution is insufficient, the use of other eluants, such as an SDS-based solution, may improve the efficiency.

2. On-membrane digestion of proteins

NOTE: Using protein-free materials and equipment is necessary to avoid contamination with exogenous proteins. In addition, it is recommended that the operator wear a surgical mask and gloves to avoid contamination by human proteins.

  1. Cut PVDF membranes into 3 mm x 3 mm pieces using surgical scissors that have been wiped with methanol and dried immediately prior to use.
  2. Add 2–5 µL of ethanol to the pieces of PVDF membrane on clean aluminum foil.
  3. Before they dry completely, add the eluant (2–5 µL each, 4–6 pieces per sample) onto the hydrophilic PVDF membranes, and then air-dry the membranes until the membrane surface becomes matte. Dried membranes can be stored at 4 °C.
  4. Transfer all membranes into 1.5 mL plastic tubes, add 20–30 µL of ethanol to make the membranes hydrophilic, and then remove the ethanol using a pipette.
  5. Before the membrane dries out completely, add 200 µL of dithiothreitol (DTT)-based reaction solution (80 mM NH4HCO3, 10 mM DTT, and 20% acetonitrile) and incubate it at 56 °C for 1 h.
  6. Replace the reaction solution with 300 µL of iodoacetamide solution (80 mM NH4HCO3, 55 mM iodoacetamide, and 20% acetonitrile), and incubate for 45 min at room temperature in the dark.
  7. Wash the membranes twice with 1 mL of distilled water and once with 1 mL of 2% acetonitrile by vortex mixing for >10 s.
  8. Dissolve lyophilized MS-grade trypsin (Table of Materials) directly in the reaction solution (30 mM NH4HCO3containing 70% acetonitrile). Add 100 µL of the reaction solution containing 1 μg of trypsin (Table of Materials) (30 mM NH4HCO3containing 70% acetonitrile) and incubate at 37 °C overnight.
  9. Transfer the reaction solution containing the tryptic digests into a clean 1.5 mL test tube using a pipette.
  10. Add 100 µL of wash solution (70% acetonitrile/1% trifluoroacetic acid) to the membrane and incubate it at 60 °C for 2 h. Collect the wash solution and mix it with the reaction solution. Add another 100 μL of wash solution to the membrane and sonicate it for 10 min. Then collect the wash solution and mix it with the reaction solution.
  11. Cover the test tube with a piece of laboratory film and make a couple of small holes with a needle. Dry the solution using a vacuum concentrator.
  12. Dissolve the residue in 10 µL of 0.2% formic acid. After centrifugation (12,000 ×g, 3 min at room temperature), transfer the supernatant into a sample tube.
    NOTE: The washes are the critical steps of this section. During on-membrane protein digestion, the washing of the membranes containing the immobilized proteins after reduction and alkylation with distilled water, followed by 2% acetonitrile, for more than 10 sec each, is critical for the removal of the reagents.

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Materials

NameCompanyCatalog NumberComments
AcetonitrileWako014-00386
Citric acidWako030-05525
DTTNacalai tesque14112-94
Dynabeads protein GThermo Fisher Scientific10003D
Formic acidWako066-00461
IodoacetamideWako095-02151
Lipofectamine 3000Thermo Fisher ScientificL3000008
Living Colors A.v. Monoclonal Antibody (JL-8)Clontech632380
NaClWako191-01665
NH4HCO3Wako018-21742
Nonidet P-40SigmaN6507Poly(oxyethelene) octylphenyl ether (n=9)
Protease inhibitor co*cktailSigmaP8465
Sequencing Grade Modified TrypsinPromegaV5111Trypsin
Sodium orthovanadateSigmaS6508
Sodium phosphate dibasic dihydrateSigma71643
TFAWako206-10731
TrisWako207-06275
Tween-20Wako160-21211

DOWNLOAD MATERIALS LIST

On-Membrane Protein Digestion to Prepare Co-Immunoprecipitated Proteins for Interaction Studies (Scientific Article Protocol) | JoVE | Translated to Japanese (2024)

FAQs

How is co-immunoprecipitation used to measure protein interaction? ›

Co-IP works by selecting an antibody that targets a known protein that is believed to be a member of a larger complex of proteins. By targeting this known member of a complex with an antibody, you might be able to pull the entire protein complex out of solution and thereby identify unknown members of the complex.

What is the theory of Coimmunoprecipitation? ›

Co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) is a technique commonly used to indirectly capture proteins bound to specific target proteins using target protein-specific antibodies and to confirm binding capacity using cellular whole proteins, where the target proteins are present in an active form in eukaryotic cells, which may be ...

What is the Coimmunoprecipitation protocol? ›

A Simple Co-immunoprecipitation Protocol
  • Lyse your Cells. Here you gently break open your cells to make your protein accessible to the antibody. ...
  • Add Your Antibody. ...
  • Add the Protein A/G Beads. ...
  • Incubate. ...
  • Collect. ...
  • Wash the Beads. ...
  • Elute your Protein(s) ...
  • Detect your Protein(s)

What is the difference between immunoprecipitation and co-immunoprecipitation? ›

In immunoprecipitation (IP), an antibody is used to purify its specific target, or antigen from a mixture. In co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP), an antibody is used to purify its target antigen, along with its binding partners, from a mixed sample.

What are the benefits of co-immunoprecipitation? ›

Co-IP enables the isolation of protein complexes in their native state, maintaining their structural integrity and functional relevance. Unlike in vitro methods that may disrupt protein interactions, Co-IP allows researchers to capture and study protein complexes as they exist in cells or tissues.

What are the limitations of co-immunoprecipitation? ›

Despite its uses, co-IP is not without limitations. Co-IPs require considerable optimization to maintain protein-protein interactions, which can be easily disrupted by handling and buffer conditions. As a result, low-affinity and transient protein interactions may not be detected.

What is the theory of coprecipitation? ›

Coprecipitation is a method in chemistry that involves the simultaneous formation of solid particles during the precipitation process. It offers advantages such as higher hom*ogeneity, compositional control, and lower synthesis temperatures compared to traditional methods.

How is co-immunoprecipitation different from BioID? ›

As outlined above, BioID functions fundamentally different from co-IPs in that it appends biotin to nearby proteins in a distance- and time-dependent manner, whereas co-IPs reveals interactors forming a physical complex with the bait that is stable enough to endure the purification conditions.

What is the difference between Western blot and co-IP? ›

As a result, a western blot of the input (the cell lysate) includes proteins A, B, C, and D, but the western of the co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) only shows the protein of interest (protein A) and any proteins associated with protein A in the cell (protein B).

What is the best lysis buffer for co-immunoprecipitation? ›

Steps
Recommended useBuffer
Protein localized in membrane or cytoplasmic (mild lysis method)NP-40 lysis buffer
Protein localized in cytoplasmic or nuclear (harsh lysis method)RIPA lysis buffer
May 24, 2023

What is the procedure for immunoprecipitation? ›

Sample preparation, pre-clearing, antibody incubation/formation of antibody-antigen complexes, precipitation, and washing are the five key phases in the immunoprecipitation assay procedure.

What are the applications of co IP? ›

Co-IP is commonly employed to analyze and identify protein complexes. By selectively immunoprecipitating a target protein using specific antibodies, researchers can capture the protein along with its interacting partners.

What is co-immunoprecipitation in C elegans? ›

Co-immunoprecipitation with mass spectrometry detects protein–protein interactions with high throughput. The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans is a powerful genetic model organism for in vivo studies. Yet its rigid and complex tissues require optimization for biochemistry applications to ensure reproducibility.

What is immunoprecipitation protocol protein A? ›

Immunoprecipitation of the Target Protein
  1. Add an appropriate amount of the specific antibody and gently rock at +2 to +8 °C for one hour.
  2. Add 50 μL of the hom*ogeneous Protein A Agarose suspension to the mixture and incubate at +2 to +8 °C for at least three hours or overnight on a rocking platform.

How do you measure protein-protein interactions? ›

Standard methods for determining the affinity of protein interactions include isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), microscale thermophoresis (MST), surface plasmon resonance (SPR), and biolayer interferometry (BLI) (Jerabek-Willemsen et al., 2014; Khalili et al., 2018; Noy-Porat et al., 2021; Wu & Piszczek, 2020).

Which technique is typically used to identify protein-protein interactions? ›

Co-immunoprecipitation (co-IP) is a popular technique for protein interaction discovery.

How do you test for protein-DNA interactions? ›

Analytical methods include microscopy and classical biochemical assays like chromatin immunoprecipitation analysis (ChIP), Systematic Evolution of Ligands by EXponential enrichment (SELEX), Electrophoretic mobility shift assays, DNA footprinting, and protein-binding microarrays.

Which technique is used to detect DNA protein interaction? ›

A hybrid of the DNA pull-down assay and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA), microplate capture assays use immobilized DNA probes to capture specific protein–DNA interactions and confirm protein identities and relative amounts with target specific antibodies.

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