ABSTRACT
Methods that allow visualisation of proteins in living systems, in real time have been key to our understanding of the molecular underpinnings of life. Although the use of genetically encoded fusions to fluorescent proteins have greatly advanced such studies, the large size of these tags and their ability to perturb protein activity has been major limitations. Attempts to circumvent these issues have seen the genesis of complementary strategies to chemically label/modify proteins. Thus, chemical labelling approaches seek to "decorate" biomolecules in live cells through the site-specific introduction of a small, non-native chemical tag (or reporter group). The introduced tag is minimally invasive such that the activity and/or function of the target molecule in not perturbed/compromised by its inclusion. In most cases, this modification is brought about by fusing target biomolecules to protein domains/peptide tags or via the incorporation of reactive "handles" by either exploiting the cell's biosynthetic machinery or during protein synthesis. Selective tagging of the biomolecule then proceeds via a bioorthogonal chemical reaction following exogenous addition of probe(s). Depending on the nature of the probe, the method can be applied to either visualise/track the dynamics of target molecule(s) in their native cellular milieu or for affinity enrichment for further downstream applications. The versatility of these approaches has been demonstrated by their ability to tag not just proteins but also intractable biomolecules like lipids and glycans. In this review, we summarise the various strategies available to "chemically" tag proteins and provide a comparative analysis their advantages and disadvantages. We also highlight the many creative applications of such methodologies and discuss their future prospects.
Subject(s)
Protein Engineering/methods , Proteins/chemistry , Staining and Labeling/methods , Animals , Biotinylation , Fluorescent Dyes/chemistry , Humans , Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/chemistry , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/geneticsABSTRACT
This section introduces a simple, rapid, high-throughput methodology for the site-specific biotinylation of proteins for the purpose of fabricating functional protein arrays. Step-by-step protocols are provided to generate biotinylated proteins using in vitro, in vivo, or cell-free systems, together with useful hints for troubleshooting. In vitro and in vivo biotinylation rely on the chemoselective native chemical ligation (NCL) reaction between the reactive alpha-thioester group at the C-terminus of target proteins, generated via intein-mediated cleavage, and the added cysteine biotin. The cell-free system uses a low concentration of biotin-conjugated puromycin. The biotinylated proteins can be either purified or directly captured from crude cellular lysates onto an avidin-functionalized slide to afford the corresponding protein array. The methods were designed to preserve the activity of the immobilized protein such that the arrays provide a highly miniaturized platform to simultaneously interrogate the functional activities of thousands of proteins. This is of paramount significance, as new applications of microarray technologies continue to emerge, fueling their growth as an essential tool for high-throughput proteomic studies.