Firefly Luciferase Complementation Imaging Assay for Protein-Protein Interactions in Plants
Author(s) -
Huamin Chen,
Yan Zou,
Yulei Shang,
Huiqiong Lin,
Yujing Wang,
Run Cai,
Xiaoyan Tang,
JianMin Zhou
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
plant physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.554
H-Index - 312
eISSN - 1532-2548
pISSN - 0032-0889
DOI - 10.1104/pp.107.111740
Subject(s) - luciferase , bimolecular fluorescence complementation , protein fragment complementation assay , complementation , fusion protein , protein–protein interaction , bioluminescence , biology , biochemistry , f box protein , protein tag , yellow fluorescent protein , cullin , effector , microbiology and biotechnology , mutant , ubiquitin , ubiquitin ligase , recombinant dna , transfection , yeast , gene
The development of sensitive and versatile techniques to detect protein-protein interactions in vivo is important for understanding protein functions. The previously described techniques, fluorescence resonance energy transfer and bimolecular fluorescence complementation, which are used widely for protein-protein interaction studies in plants, require extensive instrumentation. To facilitate protein-protein interaction studies in plants, we adopted the luciferase complementation imaging assay. The amino-terminal and carboxyl-terminal halves of the firefly luciferase reconstitute active luciferase enzyme only when fused to two interacting proteins, and that can be visualized with a low-light imaging system. A series of plasmid constructs were made to enable the transient expression of fusion proteins or generation of stable transgenic plants. We tested nine pairs of proteins known to interact in plants, including Pseudomonas syringae bacterial effector proteins and their protein targets in the plant, proteins of the SKP1-Cullin-F-box protein E3 ligase complex, the HSP90 chaperone complex, components of disease resistance protein complex, and transcription factors. In each case, strong luciferase complementation was observed for positive interactions. Mutants that are known to compromise protein-protein interactions showed little or much reduced luciferase activity. Thus, the assay is simple, reliable, and quantitative in detection of protein-protein interactions in plants.
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