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In situ isolation of nuclei or nuclear proteins from adherent cells: a simple, effective method with less cytoplasmic contamination
Qin, Ying; Zhou, Yun; Wang, Kun; Gu, Jiaxuan; Xiong, Zhihao; Zhang, Wendiao; Chen, Yong.
Affiliation
  • Qin, Ying; Nanchang University. Institute for Advanced Study. Jiangxi Key Laboratory for Microscale Interdisciplinary Study. Nanchang. CN
  • Zhou, Yun; Nanchang University. Institute for Advanced Study. Jiangxi Key Laboratory for Microscale Interdisciplinary Study. Nanchang. CN
  • Wang, Kun; Nanchang University. College of Life Sciences. Nanchang. CN
  • Gu, Jiaxuan; Nanchang University. College of Life Sciences. Nanchang. CN
  • Xiong, Zhihao; Nanchang University. College of Life Sciences. Nanchang. CN
  • Zhang, Wendiao; Nanchang University. College of Life Sciences. Nanchang. CN
  • Chen, Yong; Nanchang University. Institute for Advanced Study. Jiangxi Key Laboratory for Microscale Interdisciplinary Study. Nanchang. CN
Biol. Res ; 56: 18-18, 2023. ilus, graf
Article in English | LILACS | ID: biblio-1439485
Responsible library: CL1.1
ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND:

Isolation of nuclei or nuclear proteins is a prerequisite for western blot, nuclear proteome profiling, and other evaluations of nuclear proteins. Here, we developed a simple method for in situ isolation of nuclei or nuclear proteins by in situ removing the extranuclear part of adherent cells via a classical nonionic detergent triton X-100.

RESULTS:

First, the feasibility of our method was confirmed by confocal microscopy, atomic force microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, dynamic light scattering, immunofluorescence imaging, and time-lapse dynamic observation. Next, the optimal concentration range (approximately 0.1-1% for ~ 10 min) of triton X-100 and the optimal treatment time (< 30 min) of 0.1-1% Triton X-100 for our method were determined via western blotting of eight extra-/ intra-nuclear proteins. Subsequently, the effectiveness, sensitivity, and cytoplasmic contamination of our method were tested by investigating the levels of phosphorylated p65 (a NF-κB subunit) in the nuclei of endothelial or tumor cells treated with/without lipopolysaccharide (LPS) via western blotting and by comparing with a commercial nuclear protein extraction kit (a classical detergent-based method). The data show that compared with the commercial kit our method obtained a higher yield of total nuclear proteins, a higher pP65 level in both control and LPS groups, and much lower content of GAPDH (as a reference for cytoplasmic contamination) in nuclei.

CONCLUSIONS:

The in situ isolation of nuclei or nuclear proteins from adherent cells in this study is a simple, effective method with less cytoplasmic contamination. This method/strategy has the potential of improving the quality of downstream evaluations including western blotting and proteomic profiling.
Subject(s)


Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: LILACS Main subject: Nuclear Proteins / Lipopolysaccharides Language: English Journal: Biol. Res Journal subject: Biology Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: China Institution/Affiliation country: Nanchang University/CN

Full text: Available Collection: International databases Database: LILACS Main subject: Nuclear Proteins / Lipopolysaccharides Language: English Journal: Biol. Res Journal subject: Biology Year: 2023 Document type: Article Affiliation country: China Institution/Affiliation country: Nanchang University/CN
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