lab techniques 2 Flashcards

1
Q

differential centrifugation

A
  • separating cell compartments by density
  • used to determine cellular/subcellular location
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2
Q

immunofluorescence

A
  • used to determine cellular/subcellular location
  • use labeled antibody to detect
  • primary antibody attaches to protein and secondary antibody that is labeled with fluorescent dye
  • must kill cells for intracellular staining
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3
Q

how can fusion proteins be used to determine cellular location

A
  • useful if the protein of interest doesn’t have an antibody
  • make a reporter construct that is fusion of protein of interest and reporter protein (like GFP)
  • sequence on some kind of expression contruct such as a plasmid or viral vector
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4
Q

what role do epitope tags play in protein fusion

A
  • useful if you dont have an antibody for the protein of interest
  • make fusion of protein of interest with epitope tag
  • epitope tag is a sequence that is bound to an antibody
  • antibody can be attached to a fluorescent molecule
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5
Q

affinity chromatography

A
  • use antibody against one protein to capture interacting proteins
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6
Q

co-immunoprecipitation

A
  • substrate is incubated in a tube with antibody-coupled resin
  • other molecules are spun and washed off
  • remaining materials are spun and antigen and protein interacting with antigen are eluted
  • proteins analyzed using SDS-PAGE and western blot
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7
Q

how would you accomplish co-IP or affinity chromatography without an antibody for the protein of interest

A
  • GST pull-down
  • make a fusion protein with the protein of interest and a protein or aa sequence with a high affinity ligand as “bait”
  • target interacting protein is prey
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8
Q

FRET

A
  • fluorescence resonance energy transfer
  • uses two fusion proteins with protein of interest and fluorescent protein
  • introduce constructs to the cells
  • excite at one wavelength and detect emission wavelength
  • absorption spectrum of acceptor molecule must overlap with the emission of the donor molecule
  • more effective at shorter distances (within 50-100 angstroms)
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9
Q
A
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9
Q

Yeast two-hybrid

A
  • way of testing protein-protein interactions
  • requires DNA binding domain (DBD) and transcriptional activation domain (AD)
  • DBD is on the bait vector and AD is on the prey
  • DBD binds to DNA and if the two proteins interact, AD will also bind and recruit RNA polymerase and reporter gene will be expressed
  • if the proteins don’t interact, the reporter gene will not be expressed
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10
Q

how would you use yeast two-hybrid if you dont have a hypothesis about which proteins will interact

A
  • add DBD and bait, lac Z as reporter gene and mRNA for different potential prey proteins with the prey protein
  • if no interaction, no lacZ expression, white colonies
  • if interaction - activation of transcription, blue colonies will grow
  • collect and sequence blue colonies to identify interacting protein
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11
Q

what are some pros and cons of yeast 2 hybrid

A

pros:
- relatively simple
- easy to sequence plasmid DNA to determine interacting proteins
cons:
- proteins being tested may require factors absent in yeast, like chaperones
- fusion to DBD or AD may interfere with binding regions of proteins

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