Literature DB >> 36042885

Protein purification, crystallization, and structure determination of human DEAD-box RNA helicase DDX21 in different unwinding states.

Zijun Chen1, Jinqing Huang2, Jixi Li3.   

Abstract

RNA helicase DDX21 plays vital roles in ribosomal RNA processing and the regulation of host innate immunity during virus infection. Here, we describe the optimized protocols for nucleic acid-free protein purification and crystallization of DDX21 in its different unwinding states. Rational design of the flexible region within the helicase core, and biophysical approach to characterize interactions between DDX21 and RNA, leads to successful crystallization of DDX21. This protocol can be applied to the crystallography of other DExD/H-box RNA helicases. For complete details on the use and execution of this protocol, please refer to Chen et al. (2020).
© 2022 The Author(s).

Entities:  

Keywords:  Molecular Biology; Protein Biochemistry; Protein expression and purification; Structural Biology; X-ray Crystallography

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Substances:

Year:  2022        PMID: 36042885      PMCID: PMC9420396          DOI: 10.1016/j.xpro.2022.101642

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  STAR Protoc        ISSN: 2666-1667


Before you begin

RNA helicases unwind their RNA substrates in an ATP-dependent manner and are central to all cellular processes involving RNA (Owttrim, 2013). Mammalian DExD/H-box RNA helicases sense viral infections and trigger host innate immunity during virus infection (Fullam and Schröder, 2013). They are also linked to neurological disorders, cancer, and aging processes, which render them to be attractive therapeutic targets and potential biomarkers (Zhang and Li, 2021). However, the difficulty of obtaining RNA helicase proteins with high purity and yield is a tremendous challenge for understanding their physiological and pathological functions. Despite numerous efforts, to date, only a limited number of RNA helicase structures have been determined, which is also due to their structural dynamics and in vitro instability. We were able to overcome these difficulties and solve several sets of RNA helicase structures of DDX21 in its different unwinding states. And more importantly, the protocol described here could be applied to other RNA helicases. We anticipate that this protocol will foster the crystal structure determination of a number of DExD/H-box RNA helicases, either in apo form or in complex with the substrates, such as different ATP analogs and RNAs of interest, e.g., the R-loops or guanine-quadruplexes (G4s). This protocol described the whole process from protein purification to crystallization of human RNA helicase DDX21, which could serve as a practical guide to other crystallographers. The procedure is divided into three parts. In the first stage, we show how to express and purify RNA helicase from Escherichia coli cells. This is easily achieved by using a high-salt buffer during cell lysis and affinity purification steps, coupled to an extensive washing step to remove any tightly bound nucleic acid from RNA helicases. In the second stage, we describe the methodology for the identification of conditions promoting the interactions between the RNA helicase and the RNAs of interest using microscale thermophoresis (MST) and analytical size exclusion chromatography (SEC) co-elution binding assay. Finally, the third stage involves the crystallization screening of purified RNA helicases, including the apo form or in complex with different ATP analogs, or RNAs of interest. To begin with, we need to generate the expression plasmids by performing DNA cloning, mutagenesis and transformation, and prepare Ubiquitin-like-specific protease 1 (Ulp1).

Engineering two forms of RNA helicase DDX21 for crystallization

Timing: 1 day Obtain the human DDX21 gene sequence from the UniProt database (UniProt ID: Q9NR30) (UniProt, 2007). Use intrinsic protein disorder predictor GlobPlot (http://globplot.embl.de/) to analyze the globular domain and disorder region of DDX21. For this protocol, the boundary of DDX21 helicase core was determined using several online software, including the secondary structure prediction server JPred4 (https://www.compbio.dundee.ac.uk/jpred/), the Protein Model Portal (https://www.proteinmodelportal.org/; unavailable now), and the tertiary structure prediction sever Phyre2 (https://www.sbg.bio.ic.ac.uk/phyre2). In particular, we used MultAlin (http://multalin.toulouse.inra.fr/multalin) and ESPript (https://espript.ibcp.fr/ESPript/ESPript/index.php) to align sequences of DDX21 with several homologous sequences with known structures, including heat resistant RNA dependent ATPase (PDB: 4KBF), ATP-dependent RNA helicase vasa (PDB: 2DB3), and probable ATP-dependent RNA helicase MJ0669 (PDB: 1HV8). Based on all the analysis, residues 188–563 of DDX21 encompassing the conserved RecA-like helicase core domains D1 and D2 was chosen for expression. Construct a minimal active DDX21 construct, and add a stop codon at the C-terminus. Here, a His-sumo tag was fused to the N-terminus of the human helicase core D1D2 (amino acids (aa) 188–563) to increase protein expression and benefit for the following affinity purification. Delete part of the linker loop (GKKTQ; residues 401–405) to reduce the flexibility (Figure 1).
Figure 1

Engineering a less flexible form of the minimal active construct of human DDX21

Schematic drawing of wild-type helicase core (right top) and its del-loop form (right bottom).

Del-loop: delete aa 401–405 (red color). The loop region (aa Ile400 – Ile409) in the crystal structure of DDX21-AMP (left) is invisible, which leads to the rational design of the del-loop construct to reduce the flexibility and facilitate crystallization.

Engineering a less flexible form of the minimal active construct of human DDX21 Schematic drawing of wild-type helicase core (right top) and its del-loop form (right bottom). Del-loop: delete aa 401–405 (red color). The loop region (aa Ile400 – Ile409) in the crystal structure of DDX21-AMP (left) is invisible, which leads to the rational design of the del-loop construct to reduce the flexibility and facilitate crystallization. The conserved RecA-like helicase core domains D1 and D2 of DDX21 are originally linked with a relatively long linker region (aa around 398–412). The design of the deletion region was based on sequence alignment with other homologous sequences with known structures as described above, and no other constructs were tested since this design was proved successful in subsequent studies. Use the wild-type DDX21 helicase core construct to crystallize the DDX21-RNA complex. Use the del-loop form for the crystallization of apo-formed DDX21 or DDX21 in complex with ATP analogs.

Prepare the plasmids

Timing: 5–7 days Use the pSMT3 vector (a generous gift from Dr. Chris Lima, Sloan Kettering Institute). The pSMT3 vector is modified from pET-28a backbone and encodes a N-terminal His6-SUMO tag followed along with a BamHI restriction site for inserting gene. Design the forward and reverse primers. Amplify DDX21 (188–563, WT) by PCR, using expression plasmid encoding human full length DDX21 (aa 1–783) (Chen et al., 2020) as template. Set up the standard PCR reactions in a 50 μL format as below. PCR reaction master mix Perform the PCR amplification as below in a T100 Thermal Cycler (Bio-Rad). PCR cycling conditions Digest the PCR product and the pSMT3 vector with BamHI (NEB) and HindIII (NEB) restriction endonucleases. Set up the reaction as follows: Incubate the reaction mixture at 37°C for 1 h. Run both the digested PCR product and pSMT3 vector by a 1% agarose gel. Purify the gel slices using the QIAquick Gel Extraction Kit (QIAGEN) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Prepare a 10 μL reaction mix by combining the following reagents. The optimal insert to vector DNA ratio, is usually between 2:1 and 10:1. Higher concentrations of DNA reaction components will result in a higher rate of reaction. Mix thoroughly and incubate at 16°C for 12–16 h. When the incubation is completed, place the ligation product on ice or store at –20°C. Transform the ligation product into DH5α competent cells (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Thaw competent cells on ice. Add 1 μL of ligation product into DH5α cells. Carefully flick the tube 4–5 times to mix cells and DNA. Place the tube on ice for 30 min. Heat shock at 42°C for 45 s. Immediately put the competent cells back on ice for 2 min. Add 900 μL LB media and shake at 145 rpm in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) at 37°C for 1 h. Spread 100 μL of cell suspension on a LB agar plate containing 50 μg/mL kanamycin by using a commercial sterile spreader. Invert plates (agar side up) and incubate at 37°C for 12–16 h. Pick a single colony with a sterile pipette tip or toothpick from the LB agar plate and inoculate into 3 mL LB media. Incubate at 37°C in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) with shaking at 250 rpm for 14–18 h. Extract the plasmids from the cells by a QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit (QIAGEN) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Sent a small aliquot of the plasmid for DNA sequencing. Generate the DDX21 (188–563, del 401–405) construct by mutagenesis using QuikChange II Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit (Agilent Technologies). Design the mutagenesis primers using QuikChange Primer Design server by Agilent (https://www.agilent.com/store/primerDesignProgram.jsp). Prepare the reaction mixture as below. PCR reaction master mix Perform the PCR reaction in a T100 Thermal Cycler (Bio-Rad) using the cycling parameters outlined in below table. PCR cycling conditions Dpn I digestion of the amplification products. Add 1 μL of the Dpn I restriction enzyme (10 U/μL) directly to the amplification reaction. Gently and thoroughly mix the reaction mixture by pipetting the solution up and down several times. Spin down the reaction mixtures in a microcentrifuge for 1 min. Immediately incubate each reaction at 37°C for 1 h to digest the parental template. Transformation of XL1-Blue supercompetent Cells. Gently thaw the XL1-Blue supercompetent cells on ice. Transfer 1 μL of the Dpn I-treated DNA to the XL1-Blue supercompetent cells. Swirl the transformation reactions gently to mix and incubate the reactions on ice for 30 min. Heat pulse the transformation reactions for 45 s at 42°C and then place the reactions on ice for 2 min. Add 1 mL of LB broth and incubate the transformation reactions at 37°C in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) for 1 h with shaking at 225–250 rpm. Plate 100 μL of the transformation reaction on agar plates containing 50 μg/mL kanamycin. Incubate the transformation plates at 37°C for 16 h. Pick a single colony with a sterile pipette tip or toothpick from the LB agar plate. Inoculate into 3 mL LB-Ampicillin broth. Incubate at 37°C in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) with shaking at 250 rpm for 14–16 h. Extract the plasmids from the cells by a QIAprep Spin Miniprep Kit (QIAGEN: cat# 27106X4) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Send a small aliquot of the plasmid for DNA sequencing.

Prepare the antibiotics and IPTG stocks

Timing: 30 min Prepare kanamycin, chloramphenicol, and isopropyl-beta-d-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) stock solutions for E. coli BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) RIL (Agilent Technologies) culture. BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) RIL is chloramphenicol-resistant and engineered to contain extra copies of genes that encode the tRNAs that most frequently limit the translation of heterologous proteins in E. coli. It is ideal for difficult protein expression, especially when codon bias is a problem. For more details please see manufacturer’s instruction manual (https://www.agilent.com/cs/library/usermanuals/public/230240.pdf). Weigh out 2.25 g of kanamycin and dissolve it in 45 mL MilliQ ultrapure water. Stock concentration is 50 mg/mL. Sterilize with a 0.22 μm syringe filter and store at −20°C. Weigh out 340 mg of chloramphenicol. Transfer it to a 15 mL screw-capped tube. Add 70% ethanol and mix until all chloramphenicol dissolves completely in a final volume of 10 mL. Stock concentration is 34 mg/mL. Store chloramphenicol stock at −20°C. Dissolve 2.38 g of IPTG in 10 mL MilliQ ultrapure water. Sterilize with a 0.22 μm syringe filter. Stock concentration is 1 M. Store IPTG in 1 mL aliquots at −20°C.

Prepare LB agar plates

Timing: 6 h Weigh out 10 g LB agar, Miller (Thermo Fisher Scientific) into a 250 mL Glass Erlenmeyer flask (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Add Milli-Q water up to 200 mL. Swirl to mix and cover the top of the flask with aluminum foil and label with autoclave tape. Autoclave at 121°C for 15 min. Allow the agar solution to cool to 50°C. Add 200 μL of kanamycin stock and 200 μL of chloramphenicol stock respectively into the LB agar and swirl to mix. CRITICAL: Antibiotics must be added after the LB agar cooling down as they degrade at high temperatures. Pour ∼20 mL of LB agar into each plate. Place the lids on the plates and allow them to cool for 30–60 min (until solidified). Label the bottom of plates with antibiotic and date. Seal the plates with parafilm and store at 4°C. Storage time will vary depending on antibiotic added, but plates are generally good for 1–2 months at 4°C.

Prepare LB broth

Timing: 4 h Weigh out 25 g LB Broth, Miller (Thermo Fisher Scientific) per liter into a 2 L Glass Narrow-Mouth Erlenmeyer Flask (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Add MilliQ ultrapure water until the total volume reaches 1 L. Cover of the flask with aluminum foils. Place autoclave tapes on top of the foil. Autoclave the LB meida at 121°C for 20 min. Store the sterilized LB media in a 4°C fridge once the flask cools down.

Purification of ubiquitin-like-specific protease 1 (Ulp1)

Timing: 2 days Transform 10 ng pFGET19_Ulp1 plasmid (Addgene) (Guerrero et al., 2015) that encodes the N-terminal His6 tagged Ulp1 into BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) RIL chemically competent cells (Agilent Technologies). Grow colonies on LB agar plates containing 50 μg/mL kanamycin and 34 μg/mL chloramphenicol. Inoculate a single colony into 50 mL Luria-Bertani (LB) media supplemented with 50 μg/mL kanamycin and 34 μg/mL chloramphenicol, in a 250 mL Glass Narrow-Mouth Erlenmeyer Flask (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Grow the cells in a New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) at 37°C with shaking at 250 rpm for 14–18 h. Dilute 10 mL of cell culture into 1 L of LB media in a 2 L Glass Narrow-Mouth Erlenmeyer Flask (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Grow cells in a New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) at 37°C with shaking at 250 rpm, until the OD600 reaches 0.6–0.8. Protein expression is induced by adding IPTG at a final concentration of 0.1 mM, along with agitation at 180 rpm and incubation at 30°C for 4 h. Centrifuge the cells in Sorvall™ RC 6 Plus Centrifuge (Thermo Scientific) using a F10-6 × 500y Fixed-Angle Rotor (Thermo Fisher Scientific) at 5,000 × g for 10 min at 4°C, and then discard the supernatant. Resuspend the cell pellets in lysis buffer A with a ratio of 10 mL buffer per gram (wet weight) cell pellet, by using an ULTRA-TURRAX T10 Basic Disperser (IKA). Resuspend the cells homogeneously with intervals of 30 s on and 10 s off on ice. Lyse the resuspended cells by using an APV Laboratory Homogenizers (SPX FLOW), under 800–1,500 bar pressure and disrupt the cells for 3–4 cycles. Keep the lysate at a low temperature with 4°C cold circulation water. Sonication could be used to lyse the E.coli cells. For details also refer to Liu et al. (2020). Centrifuge the cell lysate using a SS-34 Fixed-Angle Rotor (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in Sorvall™ RC 6 Plus Centrifuge (Thermo Scientific) at 15,000 × g for 30 min. For purification from 1 L culture, incubate the supernatant with 1 mL Ni-NTA resin (QIAGEN) in a 50 mL Falcon tube and rocking on a Tube Roller Mixer (AliExpress) at 4°C for 1 h. The capacity of Ni-NTA resin (QIAGEN) is up to 50 mg/mL and 1 mL of this resin is enough for 1 L purification for Ulp1. Wash the Ni-NTA resin with 100 mL lysis buffer A containing 20 mM imidazole. Elute Ulp1 protein with 10 mL lysis buffer A containing 500 mM imidazole. Dialyze the eluate to 2 L lysis buffer A using a D-Tube Dialyzers (15 mL, MWCO 3.5 kDa; Millipore) for 16 h at 4°C. Concentrate Ulp1 protein to 5 mg/mL using a 10 kDa MWCO Amicon® Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit (Millipore). Centrifuge at 3,000 × g using an A-4-62 rotor (Eppendorf) in Eppendorf 5810R Centrifuge (Eppendorf). Aliquot and store the Ulp1 protein at −80°C.

Key resources table

Materials and equipment

Lysis buffer A Store at 4°C within 14 days. CRITICAL: Avoid contact and inhalation when handling DTT. Do not get in eyes, on skin, or on clothing. Wash thoroughly after handling. Right before purification, add cOmplete™ EDTA-free Protease Inhibitor Cocktail (Roche) into the lysis buffer A. Lysis buffer B Store at 4°C within 14 days. CRITICAL: Avoid contact and inhalation when handling DTT. Do not get in eyes, on skin, or on clothing. Wash thoroughly after handling. Dialysis buffer Store at 4°C within 14 days. CRITICAL: Avoid contact and inhalation when handling DTT. Do not get in eyes, on skin, or on clothing. Wash thoroughly after handling. Imidazole stock solution Adjust pH to 7.0 and store at 25°C within 1 year. Mix proper volume of imidazole stock solution with lysis buffer to make a desirable concentration of imidazole solutions, for preparing Ni-NTA wash buffer or elution buffer. Gel filtration buffer Store at 4°C within 14 days. CRITICAL: Avoid contact and inhalation when handling TCEP. Wash thoroughly after handling. Wear protective gloves, protective clothing, and eye protection. MST binding buffer Store at 4°C within 14 days. CRITICAL: Avoid contact and inhalation when handling TCEP. Wash thoroughly after handling. Wear protective gloves, protective clothing, and eye protection. Size exclusion chromatography co-elution buffer Store at 4°C within 14 days. Add AMPPNP to DDX21-RNA mixture to reach a final concentration of 50 μM, and incubate for 1 h before loading to gel-filtration column.

Step-by-step method details

Transformation and expression of DDX21

Timing: 2 days Transform the expression plasmids into the BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) RIL cells and express DDX21 protein with IPTG. Collect the cell pellets for future purification. The plasmids and corresponding antibiotic resistance are summarized as bellow: BL21-CodonPlus (DE3) RIL Competent Cells (Agilent Technologies) are chloramphenicol-resistant. Resuspension of plasmid. Spin lyophilized commercial custom plasmid (from GenScript) down at 10,000 × g for 2 min in an Eppendorf 5430R Centrifuge with an FA-45-30-11 rotor (Eppendorf). Add 40 μL MilliQ ultrapure water directly to the bottom of the tube containing 100 μg plasmid. Vortex it for 10 s to make a DNA plasmid stock of 40 ng/μL final concentration. Spin it down at 10,000 × g for 2 min in Eppendorf 5430R Centrifuge with a FA-45-30-11 rotor (Eppendorf). Store the plasmid at −80°C until use. CRITICAL: Do NOT open the commercial plasmid tube without spinning it down. This may cause loss of the plasmid. Take BL21 (DE3) RIL competent cells (Agilent Technologies) cells from −80°C and place them on ice. Thaw both the competent cells and the plasmid on ice for 30 min. Add 1 μL of the plasmid into 50 μL of competent cells. Mix the plasmid gently through the bacterial solution by pipetting. Incubate the cells for 30 min on ice. Perform heat shock at 42°C for 90 s. Put the cells back on ice for 2 min. Add 500 μL of pre-warmed (37°C) LB medium into the Eppendorf tube that contains transformed competent cells. Incubate the culture tube in an incubator at 37°C for 60 min. Spread 100 μL of cell suspension using a commercial sterile spreader into kanamycin (50 μg/mL) and chloramphenicol (34 μg/mL)-containing agar plate that is preheated to 37°C. Put the plate upside down in a 37°C incubator and incubate for 18 h. Inoculate a single colony from the plate into 50 mL LB media supplemented with 34 μg/mL chloramphenicol and 50 μg/mL kanamycin. Culture the cells in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) at 37°C and 250 rpm for around 16 h. Inoculate the overnight culture 1:100 (v/v) in 1 L LB media supplemented with 50 μg/mL kanamycin, in a 2 L Erlenmeyer flask (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Grow the cells in New Brunswick Innova 44 shaker (Eppendorf) with an agitation speed of 250 rpm at 37°C until the optical density of OD600 reaches around 0.8. Switch the shaker temperature to 16°C and the speed to 180 rpm, while cooling down the cell culture in a 4°C refrigerator for 15 min. Put the cell culture back to the shaker, and induce protein expression by adding IPTG at a final concentration of 0.1 mM, along with shaking at 180 rpm at 16°C for 20 h. Harvest cells by centrifugation using a F10-6 × 500y Fixed-Angle Rotor (Thermo Fisher Scientific) in Sorvall™ RC 6 Plus Centrifuge (Thermo Scientific) at 5,000 × g for 10 min at 4°C, and then discard the supernatant. Pause point: Pellets can be stored at −80°C for up to 12 months.

Purification of DDX21 with a high salt buffer

Timing: 2–3 days Purify nucleic acid-free DDX21 protein using a high-salt buffer during both the loading and washing steps (Figure 2). High salt interrupts the electrostatic interactions between protein and nucleic acid. It is easy, cheap, fast, and sufficient to remove bound nucleic acid in general, and is the only way to purify nucleic acid-binding proteins in one step.
Figure 2

Diagram of the procedure for expression and purification of DDX21

(A) Preparation of cells expressing DDX21.

(B) Affinity purification and removal of the His-SUMO tag from DDX21.

(C) Further purification by size exclusion chromatography.

Both DDX21 constructs (WT and del-loop) were purified using the same procedure. Resuspend the cell pellets with lysis buffer B with a ratio of 10–20 mL buffer per gram (wet weight) cell pellet, by using an ULTRA-TURRAX T10 Basic Disperser (IKA), and resuspend cell homogeneously with intervals of 30 s on and 30 s off on ice. CRITICAL: The high salt (1 M NaCl) condition in the lysis buffer B is used for the purpose of nucleic acid removal from DDX21 protein. A concentration of NaCl higher than 1 M could be tried, but be careful that too high salt concentration may also cause precipitation of DDX21. 1 M NaCl is the optimal concentration in this research. HL-SAN nonspecific endonuclease (ArcticZymes) or equal product of nuclease which could endure high salt conditions, could be added into the lysis buffer B to digest nucleic acid. Polyethyleneimine (PEI) can be used to precipitate nucleic acids, but itmay cause protein loss from co-precipitation, and must be handled with care. Please keep the cell on ice for resuspension, to avoid protein aggregation or precipitation caused by heating. 1 tablet of EDTA-free protease inhibitor cocktail (Roche) per 100 mL buffer should be added to inhibit the protease activity. Lyse the resuspended cells by using APV Laboratory Homogenizers (SPX FLOW), under 800–1,500 bar pressure and disrupt the cells for 3–4 cycles. Keep the lysate at a low temperature with 4°C cold circulation water. Sonication can be used to lyse the cell. Centrifuge the cell lysate at 15,000 × g using a SS-34 Fixed-Angle Rotor (Thermo Fisher Scientific) for 30 min to remove cell debris and insoluble fractions. Equilibrate 10 mL Ni-NTA resin (QIAGEN) with lysis buffer B. Incubate the supernatant with the pre-equilibrated Ni-NTA resin in 50 mL Falcon tubes, rocking on a Tube Roller Mixer (AliExpress) at 4°C overnight. A pre-packed Ni-affinity column can be used along with an AKTA system. But overnight batch binding with Ni-NTA beads significantly increased the yield of affinity purification in our lab. Apply the suspension with the protein-bound Ni-NTA resin to an Econo-Column Chromatography Column (Bio-Rad). To remove impurities and nucleic acid, wash the resin extensively with at least 500 mL lysis buffer B that contains 20 mM imidazole. CRITICAL: Washing the resin with no less than 50 × CV volume of wash buffer is important to remove the bound nucleic acid. In particular, if purifying full-length DDX21, a larger volume of wash buffer might be necessary for complete nucleic acid removal (i.e., 100 × CV). Quick Start™ Bradford 1× Dye Reagent (Bio-Rad) can be used to roughly evaluate the protein concentration of the wash or elution fractions from a gravity column. Add 10 μL of the fractions to 100 μL of Bradford 1× Dye Reagent and observe the depth of the blue color, to roughly estimate the protein concentration. Elute his-sumo tagged DDX21 protein with lysis buffer B containing 500 mM imidazole. Add the pre-prepared Ulp1 enzyme (5 mg/mL, 200 μL) to the elution fractions to cleave between the His-sumo tag and DDX21. In general Ulp1 could efficiently cleave sumo tagged protein at a ratio between 1: 500 and 1: 1,000 (w/w) for a over-night cleavage at 4°C, with a proper buffer condition. Since high concentration of salt and imidazole will reduce the cleavage efficiency of Ulp1, we recommend to add an excess amount of Ulp1 to ensure complete cleavage. Here 200 μL of 5 mg/mL (1 mg total) Ulp1 enzyme could efficiently cleave at least 100 mg of DDX21 in this study. Transfer the reaction mixture to several D-Tube Dialyzers (15 mL, MWCO 3.5 kDa; Millipore). Immerse the D-Tube Dialyzers into 4 L dialysis buffer, stirring with a magnetic stirrer (Corning) and incubate for 16 h at 4°C to cleave the His6-SUMO tag. Other high-performance dialysis products, such as Slide-A-Lyzer Dialysis Cassettes (Thermo Scientific), could also be used for dialysis to remove imidazole at this step. Analyze a 15 μL sample of the Ulp1 cleavage reaction by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) using a Novex™ 4%–20% Tris-Glycine Mini Gel (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Troubleshooting 1. Once the desirable extent of the cleavage reaction is achieved (90%–100%), load the reaction mixture back onto an Econo-Column Chromatography Column (Bio-rad) containing 10 mL Ni-NTA resin, which is pre-equilibrated with lysis buffer B containing 20 mM imidazole. Calculate the final concentration of imidazole in the reaction mixture after dialysis, and add imidazole to reach a final concentration of 20 mM in the reaction mixture, before loading onto the “substractive” Ni-NTA column. Collect the flow-through. Wash the Ni-NTA column with lysis buffer B containing 20 mM imidazole. Analyze a 15 μL sample of each purification step by SDS Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) using a Novex™ 4%–20% Tris-Glycine Mini Gel (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Troubleshooting 2. Combine the Ni-NTA column flow-through and wash fractions that contain the tag-free DDX21. Add DTT to a 5 mM final concentration. Concentrate the protein to be with 3–5 mL final volume, using a 30 kDa MWCO Amicon Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit (Millipore) and centrifuge at 3,000 × g and 4°C in an Eppendorf 5810 R Centrifuge with an A-4-62 rotor (Eppendorf). CRITICAL: Adding 5 mM DTT could improve the stability of DDX21 protein during the concentration step. If precipitant is still observed, more NaCl (up to 1 M) and/or glycerol (up to 10%) can be added to stabilize the DDX21 protein. For DDX21(188–563, WT) and DDX21(188–563, del-loop) constructs, the solubility limit of the two proteins is around 40 mg/mL. Transfer the concentrated protein into several 1.5 mL centrifuge tubes. Centrifuge at 16,000 × g and 4°C in an Eppendorf 5430R Centrifuge with an FA-45-30-11 rotor (Eppendorf) for 5 min. Collect the supernatant by pipetting. Inject the concentrated protein onto a HiLoad 16/600 Superdex ® 200 prep grade (Cytiva) pre-equilibrated with gel-filtration buffer. Set the flow rate at 0.5 mL/min. DDX21 protein elutes at ∼90 mL on this column. Troubleshooting 3. Analyze a 15 μL sample of each gel-filtration fraction by SDS polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) using a Novex™ 4%–20% Tris-Glycine Mini Gel (Thermo Fisher Scientific). Pool protein-containing fractions, and concentrate the protein to 30 mg/mL using a 30 kDa MWCO Amicon Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit (Millipore) at 3,000 × g in an Eppendorf 5810R Centrifuge with an A-4-62 rotor (Eppendorf). Use Nanodrop (Thermo Fisher Scientific) to determine the OD280 value, and calculate the protein concentration using the Beer-Lambert law equation with molar extinction coefficient, which could be obtained from online tools such as ExPASy Protparam tool (https://web.expasy.org/protparam/). For the two DDX21 constructs used here, 1 A[280] is correlated to 1.7 mg/mL for WT construct and 1.67 for del-loop construct. For example, for WT construct when the absorbance value of the protein solution at 280 nm is 1, then its concentration is 1.7 mg/mL. The Quick Start™ Bradford 1× Dye Reagent (Bio-Rad) could also be used to quantify the protein concentration. Use the BSA standard to make a standard curve. Then measure and calculate the concentration of your protein with the standard curve. Also use Nanodrop (Thermo Fisher Scientific) to determine the OD260/OD280 ratio, a ratio less than 0.60 is a good indication of pure protein with minimal nucleic acid contamination. Transfer the concentrated protein into several 1.5 mL centrifuge tubes. Centrifuge at 16,000 × g and 4°C in an Eppendorf 5430R Centrifuge with an FA-45-30-11 rotor (Eppendorf) for 10 min. Collect the supernatant by pipetting. Aliquot the protein into 1.5 mL centrifuge tubes (50 μL per tube). Snap-freeze in liquid nitrogen, and store at −80°C for further use. CRITICAL: Reduce the freeze-thaw cycles to avoid the destabilization of DDX21 protein and for better repeating of the crystals. Snap-freeze the aliquots every time before putting back to −80°C. Diagram of the procedure for expression and purification of DDX21 (A) Preparation of cells expressing DDX21. (B) Affinity purification and removal of the His-SUMO tag from DDX21. (C) Further purification by size exclusion chromatography.

MST binding assay

Timing: 1 day Measure the binding affinity of the interaction between DDX21 and RNA using the microscale thermophoresis (MST), which is a rapid and precise method to quantify protein-nucleic acid interactions in solution (Mueller et al., 2017), especially for RNA that tends to degrade (Figure 3).
Figure 3

Characterization of the interaction between DDX21 and RNA by MST

RNAs are labeled with 5′-FAM and DDX21 is titrated. Data are presented as mean ± SD. U15 RNA has a higher affinity (lower KD value) than U10 RNA when binding to DDX21, and Both AMPPNP and MgCl2 co-factors are necessary for the interaction of DDX21 with RNA.

Assay setup pretests: before you start, make sure that you are using the optimal concentration of the labeled molecule, the correct capillary type and a buffer composition in which your sample is homogeneous. A proper buffer recipe should be used to ensure the binding between the RNA of interest and the RNA helicase protein. Before you start, compare the Monolith systems to find the suitable one. Monolith NT.115 gives the most flexibility when it comes to labeling strategy with multiple fluorescent channels, while Monolith NT. Labelfree utilizes intrinsic tryptophan fluorescence and may have less sensitivity. Furthermore, Monolith NT. Automated can help you with your screening projects with higher throughput, detection versatility, and automation option (used in this study). For more details on the MST assay to quantify protein-nucleic acid interaction, also refer to Huang and Li (2022). Fluorescence check. Fill the labeled RNA in a standard capillary and place the capillary on the tray. Insert the tray in the instrument and close the door. Select the “LED Color” fitting the dye that you are using in the box “LED Settings” (Blue color for Fam fluorescent dye). Select the “LED Power” as 50% in the box of “Capillary Scanning”. Press the “Start Cap Scan” button and the instrument will automatically scan the sample tray by measuring the fluorescence. The “Capillary Scan” will start from the last capillary and move to the first position. Make sure the reading is between 200–1,500 fluorescence counts. To achieve this, sample concentration can be adjusted, or the LED power can be varied between 15% and 95%. Choose a concentration of the labeled RNA to achieve optimal fluorescence counts. Typically, 5–100 nM labeled RNA is used. Capillary Check. Prepare the labeled RNA at the concentration you want to use in the assay. Fill four standard treated capillaries, four hydrophilic capillaries, and four hydrophobic capillaries with the RNA. Put these 12 capillaries on the tray. Insert them into the instrument and start a capillary scan. Pick the capillary that gives a symmetrical fluorescence peak. Avoid using the capillary that gives the fluorescence peak having shoulders or even clear double peak. If the fluorescence peak has shoulders or even a clear double peak, it means the labeled sample was slightly or firmly adsorbed to the surface of the capillary. In this case, try another type of capillary. In the unlikely case that the sample is sticking to all types of capillaries, you can also try different buffers (e.g., containing detergent, BSA, casein, or other additives). Additionally, try to improve buffer conditions by adjusting pH and ionic strength. Sample check. Dilute the labeled RNA in 100 μL of the the MST binding buffer. Fill into the suitable type of capillary determined. Start a capillary scan with the predetermined setting, and measure the labeled RNA sample at 40% MST power with an on-time of 30 s. Load and analyze the results in the MO. Affinity Analysis software. If there is no bumpiness of the MST curves and a decimal appears on the left axis of the plot, the quality of the sample is good (Huang and Li, 2022). MST binding test: Setting up the MST experiment with a fixed concentration of the fluorescent-labeled RNA, titrated with the unlabeled DDX21 protein. We used polyU in the MST binding test because it represents ssRNA and is the RNA we used for co-crystallization with DDX21. Other RNA sequences can be tested using MST with similar protocol. Binding of RNA helicase with RNA of interest may need additional co-factors (i.e., Mg2+ ion and ATP analogs), and a suitable pH value of the buffer is important to retain the stability and activity of your proteins. In addition, high salt (i.e., 500 mM NaCl) will tend to disrupt the binding between them, so in general please avoid using high salt buffer condition in this MST binding test. The del-loop construct still binds to polyU RNA with comparable binding affinity. Fill 20 μL of the highest concentration of the unlabeled DDX21 protein in the first well of a 384-well low attachment microplate (Corning). Instead of the microplate, micro reaction tubes can be used. CRITICAL: It is crucial to ensure that the correct protein amount is pipetted because there is no possibility of normalizing protein concentrations. Fill 10 μL of the MST binding buffer in the wells 2–12. Transfer 10 μL solution from well 1 to well 2. Mix thoroughly by pipetting up and down for several times without making any bubbles. Repeat to get a serial dilution. Finally, remove 10 μL from well 12 after mixing. Protein samples were serially diluted to obtain a concentration range spanning from ∼0.1 × Kd to ∼10 × Kd, where possible. In this study we do the two-fold serial dilution of DDX21 starting from 340 μM. Prepare a stock of the fluorescent-labeled RNA at double the concentration determined in the MST binding buffer. Mix 10 μL of 100 nM RNA with 10 μL of the titrated DDX21 protein and so the final concentration of RNA in the mixture is 50 nM. Mix well by pipetting up and down several times without making any bubbles. Incubate at 25°C in the dark for 30 min before loading them into the capillaries. To fill a capillary, dip Monolith NT. Automated Premium Capillary Chips (NanoTemper Technologies) directly into the reaction samples from the 384-well plate. All steps, including the work with capillaries, should be performed with powder-free gloves to prevent impurities and adverse effects on the glass surface, because the powder used in laboratory gloves can fluoresce and scatter light and hence, impair the measurement. In addition, touch only the ends but not the middle part of the capillaries where the observation field is located (Zillner et al., 2012). Start MST analysis. Measure at 3 different MST powers starting from the lowest MST power (e.g., 20%, 40%, 80%), and compare the results. Choose the power that yields a good signal to noise ratio as low as possible (Huang and Li, 2022). Perform data interpretation. Open MO.Affinity Analysis software. Create a new analysis and load raw data. Click Initial Fluorescence button in the View Panel to check. Typically, the variation among the 12 capillaries should be lower than 10% between different capillaries. Troubleshooting 4. The KD can be determined by selecting the KD fit model with the default setting in the Dose Response Fit window. Troubleshooting 5. Data can be exported and loaded to GraphPad Prism for binding analysis if preferred. The Compare Results screen allows for a side-by-side comparison of MST runs. The Export button in the Compare Results screen allows for exporting the dose-response chart as either a figure or raw data format. The Generate Full Report button in the Compare Result screen allows for generating a full PDF report. Characterization of the interaction between DDX21 and RNA by MST RNAs are labeled with 5′-FAM and DDX21 is titrated. Data are presented as mean ± SD. U15 RNA has a higher affinity (lower KD value) than U10 RNA when binding to DDX21, and Both AMPPNP and MgCl2 co-factors are necessary for the interaction of DDX21 with RNA.

Size exclusion chromatography co-elution binding assay

Timing: 1 day Evaluate the interaction between DDX21 and RNA and the stability of the DDX21-RNA complex using a size exclusion chromatography (SEC) co-elution binding assay. A prepacked Superdex 200 10/300 GL gel filtration column (Cytiva) is used to separate the RNA-DDX21 complex from individual components (Figure 4).
Figure 4

Characterization of the interaction between DDX21 and RNA by SEC co-elution

U15 RNA forms a stable complex with DDX21 while U10 RNA does not.

(A) Graphical representation of the principle of the gel filtration technique in which the separation of components is based on differences in their stokes radius (also called hydrodynamic radius), which is influenced by both molecular weight and shape (Hagel, 2011). SEC employs a gel matrix with pores of a specific size range and separates on the basis of whether or not a protein of a particular size or shape can enter the pore or is excluded from the pore.

(B) Superimposition of the gel-filtration profiles among DDX21, U15, AMPPNP, and the DDX21-U15-AMPPNP mixture. DDX21-U15-AMPPNP forms a stable complex in SEC (the peak marked with asterisk). U15 RNA: DDX21=1:1.3 (molar ratio).

(C) Superimposition of the gel-filtration profiles among DDX21, U10, AMPPNP, and the DDX21-U10-AMPPNP mixture. DDX21-AMPPNP and U10 could not form a stable complex in SEC.

Dilute DDX21 protein to 1 mg/mL in a 1.5 mL centrifuge tube with size exclusion chromatography (SEC) co-elution buffer supplemented with 100 μM AMPPNP in a final volume of 200 μL. Dilute RNA for analysis in another 1.5 centrifuge tube with MST binding buffer to a final volume of another 200 μL. Make sure that the molar ratio of RNA: protein is around 1:1. Mix the diluted DDX21 protein and RNA and incubate the mixture at 4°C for 1 h. Centrifuge the DDX21-RNA mixture at 16,000 × g and 4°C in an Eppendorf 5430R Centrifuge with an FA-45-30-11 rotor (Eppendorf) for 5 min. Load the supernatant into Superdex 200 10/300 GL gel filtration column (Cytiva). Run sample with a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. Set up control of individual components including DDX21 alone, RNA alone, and AMPPNP alone. Run 200 μg DDX21 protein, or 15 μM RNA of interest, or 100 μM AMPPNP respectivtly in the same gel filtration column with a flow rate of 0.5 mL/min. Pre-dilute the three samples respectively with size exclusion chromatography (SEC) co-elution buffer in a final volume of 400 μL, before loading into the column. Superimpose the gel-filtration profiles. Compare the retention volume of DDX21-RNA mixture with individual components. Left shift of the peak of the RNA-DDX21 mixture from gel-filtration indicates the binding of RNA and DDX21 protein. Troubleshooting 5. AMPPNP has very strong absorbance at OD260, and elutes with a retention volume of around 20 mL. Collect each peak fraction and run SDS-PAGE gel to check, especially when the interaction is not very strong and the RNA-protein complex is not stable enough. A partial left shift of the gel filtration fractions in the SDS-PAGE gel still indicates the interaction between RNA and protein, but is not recommended to be used for co-crystallization. Characterization of the interaction between DDX21 and RNA by SEC co-elution U15 RNA forms a stable complex with DDX21 while U10 RNA does not. (A) Graphical representation of the principle of the gel filtration technique in which the separation of components is based on differences in their stokes radius (also called hydrodynamic radius), which is influenced by both molecular weight and shape (Hagel, 2011). SEC employs a gel matrix with pores of a specific size range and separates on the basis of whether or not a protein of a particular size or shape can enter the pore or is excluded from the pore. (B) Superimposition of the gel-filtration profiles among DDX21, U15, AMPPNP, and the DDX21-U15-AMPPNP mixture. DDX21-U15-AMPPNP forms a stable complex in SEC (the peak marked with asterisk). U15 RNA: DDX21=1:1.3 (molar ratio). (C) Superimposition of the gel-filtration profiles among DDX21, U10, AMPPNP, and the DDX21-U10-AMPPNP mixture. DDX21-AMPPNP and U10 could not form a stable complex in SEC.

Crystallization and structure determination of DDX21

Timing: 7–14 days for crystallization Timing: 3–7 days for X-ray data collection and structure determination Generate the crystals of DDX21-apo (with DDX21 aa 188–563, del 401–405), DDX21-ADP (with DDX21 aa 188–563, del 401–405) and DDX21-AMPPNP-U15 RNA (with DDX21 aa 188–563, WT). Collect X-ray data sets of these crystals and determine the structures (Figure 5).
Figure 5

Crystallization and structure determination of DDX21

Scale bar, 100 μm.

Perform the crystallization screening by using a crystal screening robot of Phoenix (ARI), with commercially available JCSG + suite kit (NeXtal) and pEG ion kit (Hampton). Store the INTELLI-PLATE 96 Well plates (Art Robbins Instruments) in Rockimager (Formulatrix) to record the formation of crystals. After initial crystal hits are obtained, optimize crystals by using a 24-well sitting drop plate with a grid search strategy, to evaluate appropriate pH, salt, and precipitant concentrations. Grow crystals by equilibrating a mixture containing 1 μL protein solution and 1 μL reservoir solution against 500 μL reservoir solution at 20°C using sitting drop vapor diffusion methods. Troubleshooting 6. Mix 20 mg/mL of DDX21 (188–563, del 401–405) with an equal volume of reservoir solution containing 20% PEG3350 and 0.2 M Na2HPO4) to grow DDX21-apo crystals at 20°C. Mix 20 mg/mL of DDX21 (188–563, del 401–405) protein supplemented with 5 mM ADP and 10 mM MgCl2 with an equal volume of reservoir solution containing 20% pEG3350, 0.2 M Magnesium acetate, to grow DDX21-ADP crystals at 20°C. Dilute purified DDX21 (188–563) to 6–8 mg/mL and incubate with a U15 RNA at a protein to RNA ratio of 1:1.1, in 20 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.5) buffer containing 100 mM NaCl, 1 mM TCEP, 1.5 mM AMPPNP and 3 mM MgCl2. Then mix 1 μL of the DDX21-U15 RNA mixture sample with 1 μL of reservoir solution comprised of 7% v/v 2-Methyl-2,4-pentanediol (MPD) and 0.1 M Bicine, pH8.5, to grow DDX21-AMPPNP-U15 RNA crystals at 20°C. CRITICAL: Pre-equilibrate the DDX21 protein and RNA to room temperature, and pre-dilute RNA from the RNA stock before mixing with DDX21 protein, could prevent precipitation. Troubleshooting 7. Purifying the DDX21-RNA complex by SEC may help to obtain the complex with correct stoichiometric ratio, and remove excess individual components. But normally this step will cause protein loss and is unnecessary, especially when the correct stoichiometric ratio is pre-determined from SEC co-elution. Plate-shaped crystals of the dimensions of ∼ 100 × 50 × 5 mm3 for DDX21-ADP and DDX21-AMPPNP-U15 complex appear within 7–14 days. Plate-shape crystals of the dimensions of ∼ 60 × 20 × 5 mm3 for DDX21-apo are formed within 14 days. Loop the crystals using appropriate loops under the optical microscope. Cryoprotect the crystals with 30%–35% glycerol before freezing in liquid nitrogen. Troubleshooting 8. Collect X-ray diffraction data at the synchrotron (Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility beamlines). Use the HKL2000 program (Otwinowski and Minor, 1997) and the XDS program package (Kabsch, 2010) for indexing, integrating, and scaling of crystallographic data. Perform crystal structure determinations by molecular replacement, using the pre-solved DDX21-AMP structure (PDB: 6L5M) (Chen et al., 2020) as a searching model with PHASER (McCoy et al., 2007), and one molecule was used to search for in the asymemetric unit. Perform structure refinement with REFMAC5 (Murshudov et al., 2011) and PHENIX (Adams et al., 2010). Perform iterative rounds of the model building using COOT (Emsley et al., 2010). The RNA was not part of the search during molecular replacement. Deposit data in Worldwide Protein Data Bank OneDep SYSTEM (https://deposit-2.wwpdb.org/deposition/). Timing of crystallization and structure determination may vary depending on the protein and X-ray data quality. Crystallization and structure determination of DDX21 Scale bar, 100 μm.

Expected outcomes

The difficulty of obtaining high purity and enough RNA helicase proteins is a tremendous challenge for understanding their physiological and pathological functions. Despite numerous efforts, to date, only a limited number of RNA helicase structures have been determined. We were able to overcome these difficulties and develop a general method to solve several sets of RNA helicase DDX21 structures in different unwinding states. Protocols for RNA helicase protein purification and crystallography are most often found accompanying the publication of specific targets. While this methodology was developed to study the helicase core domain of DDX21, with some variations it could be broadly used to purify and crystallize other RNA helicases in general. In our study, we expect to obtain 20–30 mg of pure DDX21 helicase core protein from 1 L bacterial culture. Subsequent interaction analysis between protein and RNA is performed with MST and SEC co-elution method, and then the stable protein-RNA complex is used to generate a co-crystal structure. Other apo structure or ADP-bound structure are obtained with rational engineering construct. The protocol could serve as a practical guide to direct crystallographers at the bench.

Quantification and statistical analysis

The crystal structures of DDX21 were determined using materials and software listed in the key resources table. Statistics generated from X-ray crystallography data processing, refinement, and structure validation is described in (Chen et al., 2020). MST binding assays were measured in triplicates. The raw data is processed with MO. Affinity Analysis software as described in the method details. The resulting signals from thermophoresis were analyzed using the affinity analysis software (NanoTemper Technologies) and fitted to the Kd model with the equation: where f(cligand) is the Fnorm value with a given protein concentration cligand; Unbound is the Fnorm signal of the target alone; Bound is the Fnorm signal of the complex; Kd is the dissociation constant or binding affinity; and ctarget is the final concentration of RNA in the assay.

Limitations

The key limitation of the protocol is due to the crystallization complexity; thus far, there are no set rules or 'magic bullets' that will guarantee the success of good crystals. Here, we provided a general protocol to obtain high purity and enough amount of RNA helicase DDX21 protein, and the growth of diffraction quality crystals. However, the process of protein crystallization is highly variable, and obtaining good crystals might be difficult in some cases. Screening as more crystallization kits as possible, seeding or micro matrix seeding (MMS), and additive screen are all useful to improve the quality of the crysatls. In addition, screening more constructs with carefully designed boundaries is essential to obtain the initial hits. Our sequence analysis focuses on the linker loop length between the two RecA domains and is based on in silico analysis or prediction, thus lacking experimental guidance, such as the technology of hydrogen-deuterium exchange mass spectrometry (HDX MS). In addition, for those helicase families with big auxiliary domains other than the helicase core, it may need more sequence analysis or rational mutagenesis, such as for surface residues, flexible tails, or interdomain regions, to make the proteins more amenable to crystallization. In addition, an entire unwinding cycle by DExD/H box helicase also includes the pre-unwound state. However, a structure of DDX21 in complex with dsRNA for this state is not available yet. Therefore, the dsRNA binding condition and the design of a proper DDX21 construct are still awaited. Another limitation is that the E. coli system is used in this protocol, while some other RNA helicases may need a baculovirus or mammalian expression system, which retains the necessary machinery to ensure post-translational modifications or correct folding, and may represent the more authentic conformational information and the interaction mode with RNA. However, we expect that our protocol is adaptable to switch to those protein expression systems, using the similar purification conditions and general considerations provided in this protocol.

Troubleshooting

Problem 1

Cleavage reaction is incomplete (step 31).

Potential solution

While the high salt condition in both lysis buffer and the dialysis buffer might be critical to retain the stability of DDX21 or other RNA helicases, it may reduce the cleavage efficiency of the Ulp1 protease. In addition, imidazole concentration higher than 150 mM can adversely affect the activity of the Ulp1 protease. So dialysis during Ulp1 cleavage step is necessary to increase the cleavage efficiency. If an incomplete cleavage reaction is still observed, try to add more Ulp1 protease and keep cleavage for a longer time, or try to cleave at room temperature for several hours. Another option is to do the cleavage step after dialysis. If your protein is stable at a low salt concentration (i.e., 150 mM NaCl), then change your dialysis buffer recipe to a lower salt concentration, since Ulp1 functions optimally in a reaction mixture containing 150 mM NaCl. However, conditions may be optimized by varying the NaCl concentration from 100 mM to 300 mM.

Problem 2

His-sumo tag is not removed completely (step 35). Use enough volume of fresh Ni-NTA resin and incubate the cleavage product with Ni-NTA resin for a while (i.e., 0.5–1 h), then continue the following flow-through and wash steps. Or repeat the “substractive” Ni-NTA purification step, by pooling the flow-through and washing fractions and loading again back to the Ni-NTA column, until the his-sumo tag is completely removed. Ion exchange might be another option to further polish the protein purity along with His-sumo tag removal.

Problem 3

Abnormal OD260/OD280 value is observed. OD260/OD280 higher than 0.6 (i.e., OD260/OD280=1) indicates the nucleic acid bound with protein is not removed completely (step 43). Make sure extensive washing with high salt buffer is done during the Ni-NTA column affinity chromatography step. In addition, the Heparin column could be used to remove bound nucleic acid. Or try to use gel filtration buffer with higher salt concentration (i.e., 1 M NaCl), which may help to further get rid of nucleic acid. Try to collect the peak fractions with an acceptable OD260/OD280 ratio and discard those with higher ratios.

Problem 4

The aberration of the fluorescence changes is more than 10% (step 53). Since all samples should contain the same concentration of fluorescently labeled RNA, individual differences in intensity should be maximally 10%. In case the fluorescence signals of single capillaries are highly divergent, there are several points that can be considered. First, solutions were not adequately mixed, and care should be taken next time to merge all solutions efficiently. Second, the capillary might have touched the surface of the tube and thus, fluorescence that stuck onto the cup was sucked in. Third, it is also possible that the pipette is imprecise, and another one should be tried in next experiments. However, a gradual increase in the signal with higher protein amounts indicates already a binding event and is not due to technical errors. Also, if there are stronger random variations, pay more attention to pipetting and use low-absorbance capillary (the Premium Capillary or Premium Capillary Chips).

Problem 5

No binding or weak binding is observed (step 53 and step 62). Binding of DDX21 or other RNA helicases to RNA may need the assistance of co-factor including ATP analogs and Mg2+ ion. Try screening with all kinds of ATP analogs, such as ADP, ADP-BeF3 or AMPPNP etc. And an optimal protein construct with correct boundary and region needs to be carefully designed and tried. Furthermore, if RNA binding is sequence specific, then screening different RNA sequences is also necessary. Specifically, the binding of RNA with protein is sensitive to salt concentration and generally, high salt will disrupt the interaction between them. In our case, salt concentration higher than 200 mM NaCl will definitely abolish the binding between RNA and DDX21.

Problem 6

Protein does not crystallize (step 66). Check the protein quality such as the protein purity and the homogeneity of monodisperse state. When trying to screen crystals for protein-RNA complex, make sure the binding between RNA and protein is strong enough. Try adding all kinds of co-factors that may help crystal formation, i.e., ADP, ADP-BeF3, ADPCP or AMPPNP and MgCl2. Screen as many conditions as possible, and try altering temperature (i.e., try 4°C condition). Screen for different protein constructs with rational design or mutation on the sequence. In addition, cross-seeding with existing crystal seeds might be helpful. Micro-seeds derived from previously obtained crystals of DDX21 can be used for cross-seeding.

Problem 7

Heavy precipitation is observed when mixing RNA and protein (step 70). DDX21 binds to RNA along with dramatic conformational change. Make sure to pre-dilute both of RNA and protein, and pre-equilibrate them to room temperature before mixing together, which is helpful in avoiding precipitation. If precipitation still happens, try reducing the concentration of protein or RNA, or try different molar ratio between them (evaluated firstly by MST or SEC co-elution). Increasing salt concentration or divalent cations may help to improve the solubility of DDX21 protein, but also increases the risk of disrupting the interaction between protein and RNA, and thus should be evaluated by MST or SEC co-elution in advance.

Problem 8

Crystals dissolve during looping (step 74). DDX21-AMPPNP-U15 co-crystals is very sensitive to subtle environment change of the solution. Therefore, prepare the cryoprotectant with the reservoir buffer supplemented with not only 30%–35% glycerol, but also with 1.5 mM AMPPNP and 3 mM MgCl2, to avoid crystals destabilization during looping.

Resource availability

Lead contact

Further information and requests for resources and reagents should be directed to and will be fulfilled by the lead contact, Jixi Li (lijixi@fudan.edu.cn).

Materials availability

All reagents generated in this study will be made available on reasonable request.

PCR reaction master mix

ReagentAmount
DNA template (100 ng/μL)0.5 μL
KOD Hot Start Master Mix (Merk; 0.04 U/μL)25 μL
10 μM DDX21 WT primer – forward1.5 μL
10 μM DDX21 WT primer – reverse1.5 μL
ddH2O21.5 μL

PCR cycling conditions

StepsTemperatureTimeCycles
Initial Denaturation95°C2 min1
Denaturation95°C20 s30 cycles
Annealing56°C10 s
Extension70°C15 s
Hold4°Cforever
ComponentAmount
PCR product or pSMT3 vector1 μg
10 × NEBuffer r3.15 μL
BamHI1 μL
HindIII1 μL
Milli-Q waterup to 50 μL
ReagentAmount
T4 DNA Ligase Buffer (10×) (NEB)1 μL
digested pSMT3 vector20 ng
digested PCR product100 ng
T4 DNA Ligase (NEB)1 μL
Milli-Q waterup to 10 μL

PCR reaction master mix

ReagentAmount
DNA plasmid template (5–50 ng/μL)1 μL
PfuUltra HF DNA polymerase (2.5 U/μL)1 μL
DDX21 del-loop primer – forward (100 ng/μL)1.25 μL
DDX21 del-loop primer – reverse (100 ng/μL)1.25 μL
DNTP mix1 μL
10 × reaction buffer5 μL
ddH2O39.5 μL

PCR cycling conditions

StepsTemperatureTimeCycles
Initial Denaturation95°C30 s1
Denaturation95°C30 s18 cycles
Annealing55°C1 min
Extension68°C6 min
Final Extension68°C10 min1
Hold4°Cforever
REAGENT or RESOURCESOURCEIDENTIFIER
Bacterial and virus strains

BL21-CodonPlus (DE3)-RIL Competent CellsAgilent TechnologiesCat#230245
MAX Efficiency DH5α Competent CellsThermo Fisher ScientificCat#18258012

Chemicals, peptides, and recombinant proteins

DithiothreitolGold BiotechnologyCat#DTT10
TCEPSigmaCat#646547
BSASigmaCat#A7030
KanamycinGoldBioCat#K-120
ChloramphenicolGoldBioCat#C-105
LB Broth, MillerThermo Fisher ScientificCat#BP1426-2
LB Agar, MillerThermo Fisher ScientificCat#BP9724-500
IPTGGoldBioCat#I2481
ImidazoleSigmaCat#I5513
ADPSigmaCat#A2754
AMPPNPRocheCat#10102547001
NP-40 (alternative)MilliporeCat#492016
Quick Start™ Bradford 1× Dye ReagentBio-RadCat#500-0205
Ni-NTA beadsQIAGENCat#30210
cOmplete™, Mini, EDTA-free Protease Inhibitor CocktailRocheCat#11836170001
Tris-HCI Buffer, pH 7.5 (1 M)Thermo Fisher ScientificCat#15567027
BamHINEBCat#R0136S
HindIIINEBCat#R0104S
KOD Hot Start Master MixMerckCat#71842-3
Ulp1 proteaseThis paperN/A

Critical commercial assays

JCSG + suite kitNeXtalCat#130920
PEG ion kitHamptonCat#HR2-139
QuikChange II Site-Directed Mutagenesis KitAgilent TechnologiesCat#200524
QIAquick Gel Extraction KitQIAGENCat#28706X4
QIAprep Spin Miniprep KitQIAGENCat#27106X4

Deposited data

Crystal structure of DDX21-AMPPNP-ssRNAThis paperPDB: 6L5N
Crystal structure of DDX21-apoThis paperPDB: 6L5L
Crystal structure of DDX21-ADPThis paperPDB: 6L5O
Crystal structure of DDX21-AMPChen et al. (2020)PDB: 6L5M

Oligonucleotides

DDX21 WT primer – forward 5′-gagaacagattggtggatccttctctaattttcccatatctg-3′This paperN/A
DDX21 WT primer – reverse 5′-ggccgcaagcttgtcgacggagctcttatattcgtttgaacttaattc-3′This paperN/A
DDX21 del-loop primer – forward 5′-tgaacaggtggacctgattaaaacggcaataactgtgg-3′This paperN/A
DDX21 del-loop primer – reverse5′-ccacagttattgccgttttaatcaggtccacctgttca-3′This paperN/A
U10 RNA: 5′-UUUUUUUUUU-3′This paperN/A
U15 RNA: 5′-UUUUUUUUUUUUUUU-3′This paperN/A

Recombinant DNA

Plasmid: pET28a(+)_DDX21 (188–563, WT)This paperN/A
Plasmid: pET28a(+)_DDX21 (188–563, del 401–405)This paperN/A
pFGET19_Ulp1Guerrero et al. (2015)Addgene Plasmid #64697
pSMT3 vectorGift from Dr. Chris Lima, Sloan Kettering InstituteN/A

Software and algorithms

XDSKabsch (2010)https://xds.mr.mpg.de/
HKL2000Otwinowski and Minor (1997)https://www.hkl-xray.com/download-instructions-hkl-2000
PHASERMcCoy et al. (2007)https://www.phaser.io
REFMAC5Murshudov et al. (2011)https://www.ccp4.ac.uk/html/refmac5.html
PhenixAdams et al., 2010http://www.phenix-online.org/
CootEmsley et al., 2010https://www2.mrc-lmb.cam.ac.uk/personal/pemsley/coot/

Other

Amicon® Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit (10 KDa MWCO)MilliporeCat#UFC901096
Amicon® Ultra-15 Centrifugal Filter Unit (30 KDa MWCO)MilliporeCat#UFC903096
Nanodrop 2000Thermo ScientificND-2000
Novex™ 4%–20% Tris-Glycine Mini GelsThermo Fisher ScientificCat#EC6021BOX
Econo-Column Chromatography ColumnBio-RadCat#7374151
D-Tube Dialyzers (15 mL, MWCO 3.5 kDa)MilliporeCat#71742
250 mL Glass Narrow-Mouth Erlenmeyer FlaskThermo Fisher ScientificCat#FB500250
2 L Glass Narrow-Mouth Erlenmeyer FlaskThermo Fisher ScientificCat#FB5006000
New Brunswick Innova 44 shakerEppendorfCat#M1282-0004
APV Laboratory HomogenizersSPX FLOWAPV-1000
Tube Roller MixerAliExpressCat#MX-T6-S
Magnetic stirrerCorningPC-410
AKTA pure 25 M protein purification systemCytivaCat. #29018226
Monolith NT.Automated Premium Capillary ChipsNanoTemper TechnologiesCat#MO-AK005
Monolith NT.AutomatedNanoTemper Technologieshttps://nanotempertech.com/zh_cn/monolith-automated/
Superdex 200 10/300 GLCytivaCat#17517501
HiLoad 16/600 Superdex 200 prep gradeCytivaCat#28989335
T100 Thermal CyclerBio-RadCat#1861096
Eppendorf 5810R CentrifugeEppendorfCat#5811000065
Eppendorf 5430R CentrifugeEppendorfCat#022620509
Sorvall™ RC 6 Plus CentrifugeThermo ScientificCat#46910
SS-34 Fixed-Angle RotorThermo Fisher ScientificCat#28020TS
F10-6 × 500y Fixed-Angle RotorThermo Fisher ScientificCat#78510TS
A-4-62 RotorEppendorfCat#022638203
FA-45-30-11 RotorEppendorfCat#022638009

Lysis buffer A

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)50 mM50 mL
NaCl (5 M)500 mM100 mL
DTT (1 M)0.2 mM0.2 mL
ddH2ON/A849.8 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

Lysis buffer B

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)20 mM20 mL
NaCl (5 M)1 M200 mL
Glycerol (100%)5%50 mL
DTT (1 M)0.2 mM0.2 mL
ddH2ON/A729.8 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

Dialysis buffer

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)20 mM20 mL
NaCl (5 M)0.5 M100 mL
Glycerol (100%)5%50 mL
DTT (1 M)0.2 mM0.2 mL
ddH2ON/A829.8 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

Imidazole stock solution

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Imidazole5 M340.4 g
ddH2ON/AUp to 1,000 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Adjust pH to 7.0 and store at 25°C within 1 year.

Gel filtration buffer

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)20 mM20 mL
NaCl (5 M)100 mM100 mL
TCEP (0.5 M)1 mM2 mL
ddH2ON/A878 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

MST binding buffer

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)20 mM20 mL
KCl50 mM0.373 g
MgCl22 mM0.019 g
NP-400.01%10 μL
TCEP (0.5 M)1 mM2 mL
BSA0.05 mg/mL0.005 g
AMPPNP1 mM0.051 g
ddH2ON/AUp to 100 mL
TotalN/A100 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

Size exclusion chromatography co-elution buffer

ReagentFinal concentrationAmount
Tris-HCl, pH7.5 (1 M)20 mM20 mL
NaCl (5 M)100 mM100 mL
TCEP (0.5 M)1 mM2 mL
ddH2ON/A878 mL
TotalN/A1,000 mL

Store at 4°C within 14 days.

PlasmidsAntibiotic resistance
pET28a(+) DDX21 (188–863, WT)Kanamycin
pET28a(+) DDX21 (188–863, del 401–405)Kanamycin
  17 in total

1.  Microscale thermophoresis as a sensitive method to quantify protein: nucleic acid interactions in solution.

Authors:  Karina Zillner; Moran Jerabek-Willemsen; Stefan Duhr; Dieter Braun; Gernot Längst; Philipp Baaske
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2012

Review 2.  Gel filtration: size exclusion chromatography.

Authors:  Lars Hagel
Journal:  Methods Biochem Anal       Date:  2011

3.  XDS.

Authors:  Wolfgang Kabsch
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr D Biol Crystallogr       Date:  2010-01-22

4.  Processing of X-ray diffraction data collected in oscillation mode.

Authors:  Z Otwinowski; W Minor
Journal:  Methods Enzymol       Date:  1997       Impact factor: 1.600

5.  Microscale Thermophoresis Assay: A Powerful Method to Quantify Protein-Nucleic Acid and Protein-Protein Interactions.

Authors:  Yu Huang; Yi Li
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022

6.  The Universal Protein Resource (UniProt).

Authors: 
Journal:  Nucleic Acids Res       Date:  2006-11-16       Impact factor: 16.971

7.  Structural Basis of Human Helicase DDX21 in RNA Binding, Unwinding, and Antiviral Signal Activation.

Authors:  Zijun Chen; Zhengyang Li; Xiaojian Hu; Feiyan Xie; Siyun Kuang; Bowen Zhan; Wenqing Gao; Xiangjun Chen; Siqi Gao; Yang Li; Yongming Wang; Feng Qian; Chen Ding; Jianhua Gan; Chaoneng Ji; Xue-Wei Xu; Zheng Zhou; Jinqing Huang; Housheng Hansen He; Jixi Li
Journal:  Adv Sci (Weinh)       Date:  2020-06-08       Impact factor: 16.806

8.  Protocol for Biochemical Analysis and Structure Determination of the ZZ Domain of the E3 Ubiquitin Ligase HERC2.

Authors:  Jiuyang Liu; Zhaoyu Xue; Kendra R Vann; Xiaobing Shi; Tatiana G Kutateladze
Journal:  STAR Protoc       Date:  2020-10-28

Review 9.  DExD/H-box RNA helicases as mediators of anti-viral innate immunity and essential host factors for viral replication.

Authors:  Anthony Fullam; Martina Schröder
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2013-04-06

10.  Phaser crystallographic software.

Authors:  Airlie J McCoy; Ralf W Grosse-Kunstleve; Paul D Adams; Martyn D Winn; Laurent C Storoni; Randy J Read
Journal:  J Appl Crystallogr       Date:  2007-07-13       Impact factor: 3.304

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