ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.

The difficulty of maintaining intact protein complexes while minimizing non-specific background remains a significant limitation in proteomic studies. Labile interactions, such as the interaction between p120-catenin and the E-cadherin complex, are particularly challenging. Using the cadherin comple...

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Main Authors: Andrew L Smith, David B Friedman, Huapeng Yu, Robert H Carnahan, Albert B Reynolds
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2011-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3024417?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-269ddeb837234916a29f1cd24d3e5f472020-11-25T02:34:21ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032011-01-0161e1620610.1371/journal.pone.0016206ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.Andrew L SmithDavid B FriedmanHuapeng YuRobert H CarnahanAlbert B ReynoldsThe difficulty of maintaining intact protein complexes while minimizing non-specific background remains a significant limitation in proteomic studies. Labile interactions, such as the interaction between p120-catenin and the E-cadherin complex, are particularly challenging. Using the cadherin complex as a model-system, we have developed a procedure for efficient recovery of otherwise labile protein-protein interactions. We have named the procedure "ReCLIP" (Reversible Cross-Link Immuno-Precipitation) to reflect the primary elements of the method. Using cell-permeable, thiol-cleavable crosslinkers, normally labile interactions (i.e. p120 and E-cadherin) are stabilized in situ prior to isolation. After immunoprecipitation, crosslinked binding partners are selectively released and all other components of the procedure (i.e. beads, antibody, and p120 itself) are discarded. The end result is extremely efficient recovery with exceptionally low background. ReCLIP therefore appears to provide an excellent alternative to currently available affinity-purification approaches, particularly for studies of labile complexes.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3024417?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Andrew L Smith
David B Friedman
Huapeng Yu
Robert H Carnahan
Albert B Reynolds
spellingShingle Andrew L Smith
David B Friedman
Huapeng Yu
Robert H Carnahan
Albert B Reynolds
ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Andrew L Smith
David B Friedman
Huapeng Yu
Robert H Carnahan
Albert B Reynolds
author_sort Andrew L Smith
title ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
title_short ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
title_full ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
title_fullStr ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
title_full_unstemmed ReCLIP (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
title_sort reclip (reversible cross-link immuno-precipitation): an efficient method for interrogation of labile protein complexes.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2011-01-01
description The difficulty of maintaining intact protein complexes while minimizing non-specific background remains a significant limitation in proteomic studies. Labile interactions, such as the interaction between p120-catenin and the E-cadherin complex, are particularly challenging. Using the cadherin complex as a model-system, we have developed a procedure for efficient recovery of otherwise labile protein-protein interactions. We have named the procedure "ReCLIP" (Reversible Cross-Link Immuno-Precipitation) to reflect the primary elements of the method. Using cell-permeable, thiol-cleavable crosslinkers, normally labile interactions (i.e. p120 and E-cadherin) are stabilized in situ prior to isolation. After immunoprecipitation, crosslinked binding partners are selectively released and all other components of the procedure (i.e. beads, antibody, and p120 itself) are discarded. The end result is extremely efficient recovery with exceptionally low background. ReCLIP therefore appears to provide an excellent alternative to currently available affinity-purification approaches, particularly for studies of labile complexes.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3024417?pdf=render
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