| Literature DB >> 19772597 |
Trinh Xuan Hoat1, Nicolas Bertin, Noriko Ninomiya, Shiro Fukuda, Kengo Usui, Jun Kawai, Yoshihide Hayashizaki, Harukazu Suzuki.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Important clues to the function of novel and uncharacterized proteins can be obtained by identifying their ability to translocate in the nucleus. In addition, a comprehensive definition of the nuclear proteome undoubtedly represents a key step toward a better understanding of the biology of this organelle. Although several high-throughput experimental methods have been developed to explore the sub-cellular localization of proteins, these methods tend to focus on the predominant localizations of gene products and may fail to provide a complete catalog of proteins that are able to transiently locate into the nucleus.Entities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19772597 PMCID: PMC2754447 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2121-10-69
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Cell Biol ISSN: 1471-2121 Impact factor: 4.241
Figure 1Schematic representation of the system. The pG5luc vector contains five GAL4-DNA binding domains upstream of a minimal TATA box, which in turn is upstream of the firefly luciferase gene. Box A and B are the interacting partners in ACT and BIND construct, respectively. Box TA in the ACT construct is a transcriptional activation domain. (A) If the target gene contains a NLS, the ACT construct product can translocate into the nucleus and interact with the BIND construct product, which activates the luciferase reporter gene. (B) If the target gene does not contain any coding sequence for NLSs, then the ACT construct product can not enter the nucleus and the luciferase gene remains inactivated.
Figure 2Strategy for the high-throughput . (A) Design of the gene-specific forward and reverse primers. The two common sequences Tag1 and Tag2 are used as margins to connect the cDNA with other DNA fragments. (B) Sample preparation. The gene-specific forward and reverse primers in (A) were used to amplify each targeted CDS. Red and green boxes are the two common sequences produced by Tag1 and Tag2 during PCR. The DNA fragments for CMV-TIP-1-TNNC2 and SV40 were obtained from the pACT vector. The PCR products were connected with the DNA fragments for CMV-TIP-1-TNNC2 and SV40 using FPCMV5 and LGT10L primers (ACT sample). (C) BIND-construct preparation. The DNA fragment for CMV-GAL4 was amplified from the pBIND vector using FPCMV6 and RPCMVGAL4 primers. A region of 20amino acids at the C-terminus of Rhotekin molecule was mediated and connected to the DNA fragments for CMV-GAL4 and SV40 (BIND construct).
Figure 3Selection of cells using a nuclear localized protein, MT1M, and a non-nuclear protein, SNX3. Reported values are luciferase activity; the error bars represent standard deviations. (A) MT1M and SNX3 were used to test the system using CHO-K1 cells. (B) Influence of cell lines was explored using hamster CHO-K1 cells and human HeLa cells.
Figure 4Small-scale validation of the assay. Luciferase-based nuclear translocation assay and GFP-fusion nuclear localization assay were compared for 22 constructs. Histogram represents the log10 of the average luciferase ratio for three independent assays. Error bars are standard deviation. The black line represents the 5-fold threshold above which a given construct is qualified as able to translocate into the nucleus; histograms in blue highlight positive luciferase results and those in orange negative results. The (#) and (x) signs, respectively, highlight the false-positive and false-negative results when compared to GFP-fusion-based nuclear localization. A representative picture of the GFP-fusion assay with blue DAPI straining and green GFP is positioned under each tested construct. The red line and error bars represent the ratio of GFP intensity in the nucleus to that of the cytoplasm computed from the GFP-fusion-based nuclear localization images. Values are also summarized in Additional File 4.