| Literature DB >> 25486605 |
Toru Ezure1, Kei Nanatani2, Yoko Sato2, Satomi Suzuki3, Keishi Aizawa2, Satoshi Souma2, Masaaki Ito1, Takahiro Hohsaka4, Gunnar von Heijine5, Toshihiko Utsumi6, Keietsu Abe3, Eiji Ando1, Nobuyuki Uozumi2.
Abstract
Cell-free protein synthesis is a powerful method to explore the structure and function of membrane proteins and to analyze the targeting and translocation of proteins across the ER membrane. Developing a cell-free system based on cultured cells for the synthesis of membrane proteins could provide a highly reproducibleEntities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 25486605 PMCID: PMC4259328 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0112874
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Flow chart for the preparation of microsomes from Sf21 cultured insect cells.
Fewer centrifugation and wash steps were required compared to the conventional protocol for the preparation of rough microsomes from dog pancreas and the composition of the buffer was simplified. Single-tube reactions consisting of Sf21microsomes, cell-free translationally active lysates from cultured insect cells and mRNA were performed to synthesize membrane proteins in vitro.
List of constructs used.
| figure | name | gene | source | No. TMS | insertion machinery | modifications | vector |
|
| β-lactamase | β-lactamase |
| None (secreted) | translocon | Strep-tag sequence fused to the C-terminus of β-lactamase | pTD1-strep |
| KvAP | K+ channel |
| 6 | prolactin containing g-loop fused to cytosolic C-terminus of KvAP. G-loop at extracellular loop between S3 and S4 | pTD1 | ||
| pro-TNF | pro-tumor necrosis factor | human | 1 | N-glycosylation site at the extracellular C-terminal region | pTD1 | ||
| Syb2 | synaptobrevin II | human | 1 | GET | Drosophila-based GVPYVSSSDSGSGGGNK | pTD1 | |
|
| AtKC1 | K+ channel |
| 6 | translocon | Strep-tag sequence fused to the C-terminus of each protein | pTD1-strep |
| KAT1 | pTD1-strep | ||||||
| KAT2 | pTD1-strep | ||||||
| GORK | pTD1-strep | ||||||
| AKT1 | pTD1-strep | ||||||
| NhaA | Na+/H+ antiporter |
| 12 | Strep-tag sequence fused to the C-terminus of NhaA. | pTD1-strep | ||
| AspT | aspartate: alanine antiporter |
| 10 | 6× His tag sequence at the C-terminus | pTD1 | ||
| MsbA | ABC transporter |
| 6 | 6× His tag sequence at the N-terminus | pTD1 | ||
| Sec61β | Sec61β | human | 1 | GET | Drosophila-based GVPYVSSSDSGSGGGNK | pTD1 | |
|
| AspT-His | AspT-His |
| 10 | translocon | 6× His tag at a cytoplasmic large loop between the 5th and the 6th transmembrane domain | pTD1 |
|
| NhaA | Na+/H+ antiporter |
| 12 | translocon | 8× His tag sequence at the C-terminus | pTD1 |
|
| NhaA | Na+/H+ antiporter |
| 12 | translocon | Addition of Gly-Gly, non-natural amino acid immediately after V388 in the NhaA construct as shown in | pTD1-strep |
|
| KvAP | K+ channel |
| 6 | translocon | See | pTD1 |
| pro-TNF | pro-tumor necrosis factor | human | 1 | See | pTD1 | ||
| Syb2 | synaptobrevin 2 | human | 1 | GET | See | pTD1 |
Figure 2Assessment of posttranslational modification of secreted proteins and membrane proteins synthesized using the cell-free system containing Sf21 microsomes.
(A) Cleavage of the signal peptide of β-lactamase in microsomes. Translocation reactions containing E. coli β-lactamase labeled with FluoroTect GreenLys tRNA (12.5 µl) were mixed with 1 µl of sterilized water (lane 2), with 0.5 µl of 200 µg/ml proteinase K and 0.5 µl of 20% (v/v) Triton X-100 (lane 3) or 0.5 µl of 200 mg/ml proteinase K (lane 4). The samples were incubated for 1 h at 4°C. Equal volumes (6 µl) of the samples were separated by SDS-PAGE on 15% gels. The open circle marks the mature protein without the signal peptide. Lane 1 contains β-lactamase synthesized without microsomes as a control. (B) The N-terminal signal peptide sequence of β-lactamase is required for its translocation across the microsomal membrane. The E. coli β-lactamase lacking its signal peptide (Δsp-β-lactamase) and the wild type (β-lactamase) were labeled with FluoroTect GreenLys tRNA (12.5 µl). The translocation reaction was performed as in panel A. (C) N-linked glycosylation of membrane proteins in the microsomes. Aeropyrum pernix voltage-dependent K+ channel (KvAP), human pro-tumor necrosis factor (pro-TNF) and human synaptobrevin II (Syb2) were labelled with 35S-methionine during translation in the presence (+) or absence (-) of Sf21 microsomes. Dots indicate the glycosylated form of the proteins. (D) Confirmation of N-linked glycosylation of Syb2 labeled with 35S-methionine. One µl of 10% (v/v) Triton X-100 and 1 µl of 500 mU/ml glycopeptidase F (GpF) were added to the translation mixture (12.5 µl), followed by incubation for 5 min at 37°C. The dot indicates the glycosylated protein.
Figure 3Production of different membrane proteins using the cell-free system.
After synthesis of the membrane proteins in the cell-free system in the presence of FluoroTect GreenLys tRNA, the membrane fraction was precipitated and separated by SDS/PAGE. (A) 10% polyacrylamide gel; lane 1, AtKC1 (plant, K+ channel, 6 transmembrane segments (TMS)); lane 2, KAT1 (plant, K+ channel, 6 TMS); lane 3, KAT2 (plant, K+ channel, 6 TMS); lane 4, GORK (plant, K+ channel, 6 TMS); lane 5, AKT1 (plant, K+ channel, 6 TMS); lane 6, NhaA (bacteria, Na+/H+ antiporter, 10 TMS); Lane 7, AspT (bacteria, aspartate: alanine antiporter, 10 TMS); lane 8, MsbA (bacteria, ABC transporter, 12 TMS). (B) 15% polyacrylamide gel; lane 9, Sec61 β(human, 1 TMS).
Figure 4Reconstitution of the AspT aspartate transporter synthesized in the cell-free system with Sf21 microsomes.
(A) Cell-free synthesized AspT purified with cobalt affinity resin under non-denaturing conditions was solubilized with 1.5% DDM, and eluted with 0.01% DDM and 250 mM imidazole. The purified AspT protein (arrow head) was subjected to SDS-PAGE. (B) L-aspartate transport activity of proteoliposomes containing purified AspT protein. Proteoliposomes loaded with 100 mM L-aspartate were resuspended in 50 mM phosphate buffer (pH 7) (8.3 µg protein/ml). At 0 min, L-[3H] aspartate was added into the buffer (2.5 mM final concentration). After the rate of influx and efflux of L-[3H] aspartate was equal (at steady state), non-radiolabelled L-aspartate was added to a final concentration of 15 mM at 7.5 min (solid line, arrow indicating time of addition of unlabelled substrate). The broken line corresponds to the same experiment performed without addition of unlabelled L-aspartate. (C) Comparison of the initial uptake rates for L-aspartate into E. coli expressing AspT (hatched bar) and into microsomes containing cell-free synthesized AspT (solid bar). The transport activity at 1 min was regarded as the initial uptake rate.
Figure 5Incorporation of fluorescent non-natural amino acids into NhaA.
(A) Five version of NhaA (1–5) with introduced amber (TAG) codons (or Gly-Gly-TAG, introduced changes in bold) that enable incorporation of fluorescent non-natural amino acids into the N-terminal, middle or C-terminal regions of the protein (top panel) were expressed in the insect cell-free translation and translocation system in the presence of different fluorescent non-natural amino acids. The valine (V388) at the C-terminal end of NhaA was fused to additional sequences in the linker of the vectors (Table 1). Labeled NhaA protein was subjected to SDS-PAGE and fluorescent images were taken at the indicated excitation and emission wavelengths (bottom panel). The structure of the different fluorescent non-natural amino acids used in the experiments is shown above the gel images. (B) Incorporation of fluorescent non-natural amino acids into N-terminal or C-terminal positions in NhaA at an introduced four-base codon (CGGG) (top panel). NhaA was synthesized using the cell-free translation and translocation system in the presence of BODIPYFL-AF, subjected to SDS-PAGE and fluorescent images taken at the indicated excitation and emission wavelengths (bottom panel). (C) Double-labeling of NhaA by incorporation of BODIPY558-AF at an amber codon introduced into the N-terminal region and BODIPYFL-AF at the CGGG four-base codon introduced into the C-terminal region (top panel). NhaA was synthesized using the cell-free translation and translocation system in the presence of one or both fluorescent amino acids. Images of the SDS-PAGE were taken at the two different excitation and emission wavelengths indicated (bottom panel).
Figure 6Position-specific incorporation of fluorescent amino acids by the cell-free system.
RNA templates encoding variants of KvAP, pro-TNF, or Syb2 were translated in the cell-free system supplemented with BODIPYFL-AF conjugated tRNA with or without the addition of Sf21microsomes (microsomes). The non-natural amino acids were incorporated into introduced TAG codon. The resulting proteins were subjected to SDS-PAGE (10-15% polyacrylamide) and detected with excitation at 488 nm and emission at 530 nm. The amber codon in the different constructs was substituted for the codon at the position corresponding to the listed amino acids (except for M6 in pro-TNF where the TAG codon was inserted as an additional codon after the M6 codon) and marked by a star in the diagram.