Coimmunoprecipitation (co-IP) is one of the most frequently used techniques to study protein-protein (PPIs) or protein-nucleic acid interactions (PNIs). However, the presence of coprecipitated contaminants is a well-recognized issue associated with single-step co-IPs. To overcome this limitation, we developed the two-step co-IP (TIP) strategy that enables sequential coimmunoprecipitations of endogenous protein complexes. TIP can be performed with a broad range of mono- and polyclonal antibodies targeting a single protein or different components of a given complex. TIP results in a highly selective enrichment of protein complexes and thus outperforms single-step co-IPs for downstream applications such as mass spectrometry for the identification of PPIs and quantitative PCR for the analysis of PNIs. We bench-marked TIP for the identification of CD95/FAS-interact-ing proteins in primary human CD4 T cells, which recapitulated all major known interactors, but also enabled the proteomics discovery of PPM1G and IPO7 as new interaction partners. For its feasibility and high performance, we propose TIP as an advanced tool for the isolation of highly purified protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid complexes under native expression conditions.
Sciuto, M. R., Warnken, U., Schnölzer, M., Valvo, C., Brunetto, L., Boe, A., Biffoni, M., Krammer, P. H., De Maria Marchiano, R., Haas, T. L., Two-Step Coimmunoprecipitation (TIP) enables efficient and highly selective isolation of native protein complexes, <<MOLECULAR & CELLULAR PROTEOMICS>>, 2018; 17 (5): 993-1009. [doi:10.1074/mcp.O116.065920] [http://hdl.handle.net/10807/122719]
Two-Step Coimmunoprecipitation (TIP) enables efficient and highly selective isolation of native protein complexes
Valvo, Cecilia;De Maria Marchiano, Ruggero;Haas, Tobias L.
2018
Abstract
Coimmunoprecipitation (co-IP) is one of the most frequently used techniques to study protein-protein (PPIs) or protein-nucleic acid interactions (PNIs). However, the presence of coprecipitated contaminants is a well-recognized issue associated with single-step co-IPs. To overcome this limitation, we developed the two-step co-IP (TIP) strategy that enables sequential coimmunoprecipitations of endogenous protein complexes. TIP can be performed with a broad range of mono- and polyclonal antibodies targeting a single protein or different components of a given complex. TIP results in a highly selective enrichment of protein complexes and thus outperforms single-step co-IPs for downstream applications such as mass spectrometry for the identification of PPIs and quantitative PCR for the analysis of PNIs. We bench-marked TIP for the identification of CD95/FAS-interact-ing proteins in primary human CD4 T cells, which recapitulated all major known interactors, but also enabled the proteomics discovery of PPM1G and IPO7 as new interaction partners. For its feasibility and high performance, we propose TIP as an advanced tool for the isolation of highly purified protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid complexes under native expression conditions.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.