Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay

Luciferase complementation assays detect protein-protein interactions within living cells using bioluminescence. Since the first report using plant cells was published in 2007, over 100 peer-reviewed articles have been published describing the detection of protein-protein interactions within plant c...

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Main Authors: Renee Dale, Naohiro Kato
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016-04-01
Series:Current Plant Biology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662816300044
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spelling doaj-50ba08d6a1124d0d825c4d9aeae7ed982020-11-25T00:37:15ZengElsevierCurrent Plant Biology2214-66282016-04-015C576410.1016/j.cpb.2016.02.002Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assayRenee DaleNaohiro KatoLuciferase complementation assays detect protein-protein interactions within living cells using bioluminescence. Since the first report using plant cells was published in 2007, over 100 peer-reviewed articles have been published describing the detection of protein-protein interactions within plant cells by the assays. The assays have also been used to analyze networks of protein-protein interactions in plants. Although the assays have a high dynamic range, they remain qualitative with respect to determining the affinities of interactions. In this article, we first summarize the luciferase complementation assays developed in the past years. We then describe the mechanism of the firefly luciferase complementation that is most widely used in plants, and the reason it is qualitative rather than quantitative using a mathematical model. Finally, we discuss possible procedures to quantitatively determine the affinity of a protein pair using the firefly luciferase complementation assay.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662816300044Luciferase complementationProtein–protein interactionsQuantitative assayMathematical modelPlant cellsIn vitroIn celluloIn vivo
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Renee Dale
Naohiro Kato
spellingShingle Renee Dale
Naohiro Kato
Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
Current Plant Biology
Luciferase complementation
Protein–protein interactions
Quantitative assay
Mathematical model
Plant cells
In vitro
In cellulo
In vivo
author_facet Renee Dale
Naohiro Kato
author_sort Renee Dale
title Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
title_short Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
title_full Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
title_fullStr Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
title_full_unstemmed Truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
title_sort truly quantitative analysis of the firefly luciferase complementation assay
publisher Elsevier
series Current Plant Biology
issn 2214-6628
publishDate 2016-04-01
description Luciferase complementation assays detect protein-protein interactions within living cells using bioluminescence. Since the first report using plant cells was published in 2007, over 100 peer-reviewed articles have been published describing the detection of protein-protein interactions within plant cells by the assays. The assays have also been used to analyze networks of protein-protein interactions in plants. Although the assays have a high dynamic range, they remain qualitative with respect to determining the affinities of interactions. In this article, we first summarize the luciferase complementation assays developed in the past years. We then describe the mechanism of the firefly luciferase complementation that is most widely used in plants, and the reason it is qualitative rather than quantitative using a mathematical model. Finally, we discuss possible procedures to quantitatively determine the affinity of a protein pair using the firefly luciferase complementation assay.
topic Luciferase complementation
Protein–protein interactions
Quantitative assay
Mathematical model
Plant cells
In vitro
In cellulo
In vivo
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2214662816300044
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