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Genome Res. 13:1961-1965, 2003 ©2003 by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press; ISSN 1088-9051/03 $5.00 Methods Expanding the Use of Zymography by the Chemical Linkage of Small, Defined Substrates to the Gel Matrix1 Institute of Microbiology and Genetics, Vienna Biocenter, A-1030 Vienna, Austria 2 Astbury Centre for Structural Molecular Biology, Faculty of Biological Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds LS2 9JT, United Kingdom
In the postgenomic era, the comprehensive proteomic analysis of metabolic and signaling pathways is inevitably faced with the challenge of large-scale identification and characterization of polypeptides with a particular enzymatic activity. Previous work has shown that a wide variety of enzymatic activities of microbial, plant, and animal origin can be assigned to individual polypeptides using in-gel activity staining (zymography). However, a number of limitations, such as special substrate requirements, the lack of a standard procedure, and difficulties in distinguishing enzymes with overlapping activities have precluded the widespread use of zymography as a routine laboratory method. Here we demonstrate that, by employing small-defined substrates that are covalently attached to the gel matrix, we can largely overcome the aforementioned problems and assay readily a number of different classes of enzymatic activities within gels after standard SDS-polyacrylamide electrophoresis. Moreover, this development is compatible with the two-dimensional separation of proteins and thus has great potential in the high-throughput screening and characterization of complex biological and clinical samples.
Zymography (in-gel activity staining), a two-stage technique involving protein separation by electrophoresis followed by in situ (in-gel) assay of enzymatic activities, has proved to be extremely useful for the detection of a wide range of microbial, animal, and plant enzymesincluding numerous nucleases and proteases (for reviews, see Gabriel and Gersten 1992
To illustrate the effectiveness of using synthetic molecules that are covalently attached to the gel matrix, we chose a short synthetic decaribonucleotide as a model substrate. The oligonucleotide was synthesised with the sequence ACAGUAUUUG linked at the 3' end via an 18-link spacer to an acrylamide group (Fig. 1), which was incorporated using Acrydite phosphoramidite (Kenney et al. 1998 -32P] ATP for the latter reaction was supplied
in buffer after electrophoresis and the removal of SDS. Remarkably, these
assays were at least as sensitive as silver staining without modification of
standard gel electrophoresis and washing conditions (see Methods). Further
increases in sensitivity can, however, be obtained by optimizing the
conditions for each enzyme. We were able, for example, to increase the
sensitivity of our RNase A assay by 1000-fold. This was achieved simply by
omitting reducing reagent and raising the amount of immobilized substrate by
fivefold (Fig. 2D). The
detection of 110 pg of RNase A is comparable with the sensitivity of
previously described zymograms that used poly(C) as substrate
(Bravo et al. 1994
Synthetic oligoribonucleotides including the oligonucleotide
5'-ACAGUAUUUG are being used to probe the substrate specificity and
enzymology of the RNase E/G family of ribonucleases
(McDowall et al. 1995
Given the increasingly important role of 2D gel techniques in the large-scale analysis of proteins, we next investigated the utility of covalently attached substrates in the assay of enzymatic activities following 2D gel electrophoresis using RNase G as an example. As shown in Figure 4, a number of spots that appear to correspond to different isoforms of RNase G (a polypeptide with molecular weight 58 kD and isoelectric point 5.6) were readily detected following 2D separation of E. coli cell extract and subsequent in-gel activity staining. Furthermore, the entire area of the 2D gel could be assayed as the distribution of covalently attached substrate remained uniform. In contrast, many noncovalently attached substrates move appreciably in an electric field resulting in an area at either the top or bottom of SDS/polyacrylamide gels where substrate is depleted. Without covalent attachment our radiolabeled oligonucleotide could not be detected within the gel following electrophoresis (data not shown).
We have shown here that small, defined oligonucleotides that have been covalently linked to the gel matrix are excellent substrates for zymography incorporating either standard SDS or 2D gel electrophoresis (Figs. 24). This approach can be adopted readily and expanded to assay a wide variety of activities that modify or cleave nucleic acids as Acrydite-containing oligonucleotides can be purchased (e.g., from Sigma-Genosys) or synthesized with relative ease by laboratories that have access to phosphoramidite chemistry. For example, enzymes such as helicases, polymerases, transcriptases, methylases, and certain endo-nucleases that have substrates with double-stranded segments can be assayed by hybridizing complementary segments to Acyridite-linked oligonucleotides prior to polymerization of the gel. Peptides can also be chemically synthesized, in most cases, by relatively straightforward approaches and procedures have been developed recently that allow peptides to be conjugated efficiently to mono- and oligonucleotides (Stetsenko and Gait 2000a
Mass spectrometric techniques are being developed that are able to analyze
femtomole to attomole levels of protein isolated from 2D gels
(Bakhtiar and Nelson 2001
Chemical Synthesis of Acrydite-Modified RNA Oligonucleotides Oligoribonucleotides Acr #1(ACAGUAUUUG) and Acr #2 (ACAGUGCCCG) were synthesized using an ABI 391DNA synthesizer with a standard 1-µmole DNA assembly cycle and ABI reagents. To universal support (500 Å), Acrydite 2.0 phosphoramidite (Mosaic Technologies) was added, followed by a spacer phosphoramidite 18 {18-O-Dimethoxytritylhexaethyleneglycol,1-[(2-cyanoethyl)-(N,N-diisopropyl)] phosphoramidite}. All these reagents were purchased from Glen Research. The nucleotide portion was then added using 5'-O-dimethoxytrityl-2'-O-t-butyldimethylsilyl-ribonucleoside-3'-O-(2-cyanoethyl)-N,N-diisopropylphosphoramidites purchased from ChemGenes, Inc. Oligonucleotides were deprotected with methanolic ammonia (30°C, 30 h) followed by triethylamine trihydrogen fluoride/DMSO treatment (1:1, 20°C, 16 h). Deprotected oligonucleotides were added to a DNAPac PA-100 (4 x 250) anion exchange column (Dionex) that had been equilibrated with 50 mM NaCl and were eluted with a gradient of 10% to 70% 1 M NaCl over 20 min. The peak fractions were further purified using a Jupiter C18 reverse phase (5 µm, 300 Å, 4 x 250) column (Phenomenex) equilibrated with 100 mM NH4OAc and eluted with a gradient of 0 to 35% 100 mM NH4OAc/acetonitrile (1:1) using a DX500 HPLC Chromatography System (Dionex). Following dialysis against de-ionized water, the masses of the purified oligonucleotides were confirmed using Q-Tof mass spectrometry in conjunction with maximum entropy analysis of the m/z spectrum.
Enzymes and Protein Preparations
Activity Staining
2D Electrophoresis of E. coli Proteins
This work was supported by grant no. F1707 from the Austrian Science Foundation to V.R.K. and by a Royal Society University Research Fellowship to K.J.M. We are extremely grateful to Dr. Chris Adams (Leeds) for synthesizing the oligonucleotides and Dr. Alison Ashcroft (Leeds) for mass spectrometry. We also acknowledge Ms. Lily Tong (Leeds) for confirming preliminary zymography results. The publication costs of this article were defrayed in part by payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked "advertisement" in accordance with 18 USC section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
Article and publication are at http://www.genome.org/cgi/doi/10.1101/gr.1277303.
3 Corresponding authors. E-MAIL
vladimir{at}gem.univie.ac.at;
FAX ++43-1-4277-9546. E-MAIL
genkjm{at}bmb.leeds.ac.uk;
FAX 0044-0-113-343-2835.
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Received February 17, 2003;
accepted in revised format June 4, 2003.
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