Abstract

Interactions of transcriptional activators are difficult to study using transcription-based two-hybrid assays due to potent activation resulting in false positives. Here we report the development of the Golgi two-hybrid (G2H), a method that interrogates protein interactions within the Golgi, where transcriptional activators can be assayed with negligible background. The G2H relies on cell surface glycosylation to report extracellularly on protein-protein interactions occurring within the secretory pathway. In the G2H, protein pairs are fused to modular domains of the reporter glycosyltransferase, Och1p, and proper cell wall formation due to Och1p activity is observed only when a pair of proteins interacts. Cells containing interacting protein pairs are identified by selectable phenotypes associated with Och1p activity and proper cell wall formation: cells that have interacting proteins grow under selective conditions and display weak wheat germ agglutinin (WGA) binding by flow cytometry, whereas cells that lack interacting proteins display stunted growth and strong WGA binding. Using this assay, we detected the interaction between transcription factor MyoD and its binding partner Id2. Interfering mutations along the MyoD:Id2 interaction interface ablated signal in the G2H assay. Furthermore, we used the G2H to detect interactions of the activation domain of Gal4p with a variety of binding partners. Finally, selective conditions were used to enrich for cells encoding interacting partners. The G2H detects protein-protein interactions that cannot be identified via traditional two-hybrid methods and should be broadly useful for probing previously inaccessible subsets of the interactome, including transcriptional activators and proteins that traffic through the secretory pathway.

Highlights

  • Identifying a protein’s interaction partners is essential for deciphering protein function

  • We describe the fundamental features of the G2H method, a two-hybrid assay that takes place in the secretory pathway of eukaryotic cells

  • We examined phenotypic changes caused by the activity of Golgiresident S. cerevisiae glycosyltransferases whose activities are critical to cell wall integrity [10,11,12,13,14] by assessing the growth of deletion strains at elevated temperature or in the presence of small molecule stressors

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Identifying a protein’s interaction partners is essential for deciphering protein function. Several groups have described two-hybrid or protein complementation assays (PCAs) that take place in the secretory pathway [2,3], on the cell surface [4], or in the periplasmic space of bacteria [5,6], but none of these methods has yet been widely adopted and each has its drawbacks. Those assays that rely solely on fluorescenceactivated cell sorting [3,4] necessitate access to special instrumentation. Assays that take place in bacteria [5,6] may not be suitable for analyzing proteins that require specialized factors or posttranslational modifications only present in mammalian cells

Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call