TurboID与APEX2耦合:在神经科学中破译蛋白质组传输和相互作用的应用前景

Brain-X Pub Date : 2023-12-07 DOI:10.1002/brx2.42
Hongrui Zhu, Sheng Wang
{"title":"TurboID与APEX2耦合:在神经科学中破译蛋白质组传输和相互作用的应用前景","authors":"Hongrui Zhu,&nbsp;Sheng Wang","doi":"10.1002/brx2.42","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>Proteins are often secreted and transited through cells or multiple organelles in physiological and pathological processes. Various interacting proteins are highly dynamic. Many proteins transiently interact with adjacent proteins with low affinity. This requires highly sensitive equipment for detection. For example, to monitor protein subcellular localization, transport, and interactions, we typically apply routine methods, such as imaging with high-resolution microscopy, to monitor fluorescently tagged proteins in live or formaldehyde-fixed cells. To detect the secreted target protein, we used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and western blotting. Because these methods are not often applied to detect dynamic changes in various proteins, researchers cannot perform protein profiling under diverse conditions. Most technologies can hardly decipher endogenous proteins that transit between specific organelles or cells. Professor Alice Y. Ting from Stanford University recently developed a novel technique called TransitID, and this technique can be expanded to several new applications, especially in neuroscience.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>TransitID is based on proximity labeling (PL) and involves recombining various unrestrained enzymes, such as BioID, TurboID, and APEX2. These recombined enzymes label prey protein molecules near the fusion protein in the vicinity of the spatial region, allowing them to covalently connect known chemical groups, such as biotin or alkyne-phenol (AP), to nearby proteins, thus capturing prey proteins through the purification of reactive groups. PL has been widely used in vitro and in vivo cell systems to monitor and detect protein trafficking or interactions but has not been widely used in neuroscience, except in a few studies to investigate proteins that interact between cell membranes, secreted proteomic profiling, and so on.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> Professor Ting's team combined dual-labeled proteins using PL enzymes to distinguish which proteins transited from the “source” location (the first labeling) to the “destination” location (the second labeling) via mass spectrometry. However, the TransitID system, a more delicate technique, has not been used in neuroscience thus far.</p><p>Researchers have developed four cellular applications: mapping cytosol-to-nucleus proteome shuttling, mapping proteome trafficking between the nucleolus and stress granules (SGs), mapping local versus cytosolic translation of mitochondrial proteins, and mapping exchanged endogenous proteins between two different types of cells. TurboID is expressed in the “source” location, and APEX2 is expressed in the “destination” location. Ting et al. found that TurboID can link biotin to substrate proteins. AP can also perform click-based derivatization of APEX2-tagged proteins. AP and biotin have specific affinity, membrane permeability, stability, and efficiency without having issues, such as apparent cytotoxicity, low recovery, or incomplete removal with beads. Moreover, TurboID and APEX2 can be linked with organelle unique targeted signal peptides. TurboID labeling (“source” labeling) is performed first using non-toxic labeling of biotin, and then, excess biotin is washed out and undergoes for proteome trafficking. If proteins from “source” labeling transit to a “destination” location (APEX2 labeling), AP and H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> together can realize an AP link by APEX2-tagged proteins to biotinylated protein substrates, followed by azide-fluorescein. Dual-enriched protein substrates (alkyne handle and biotin substrates) can be enriched with anti-fluorescein immunoprecipitation and streptavidin beads. Thus, TurboID–APEX2 dual-labeled proteins can be identified by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. For example, to decipher proteome shuttling between the nucleus and mitochondria, we can tag TurboID with a nuclear export signal (NES) expressed in the cytoplasm, and APEX2 can be targeted in the mitochondrial matrix. TurboID–NES coupled with APEX2 tagged with the nuclear localization signal can identify cytosol-to-nucleus protein translocation. Using the “sender” cell expressing TurboID–NES co-cultured with the “receiver” cell expressing APEX2–NES, researchers can detect intercellular protein communication (Figure 1).</p><p>The TransitID technique combines the advantages of TurboID and APEX2, which can be widely used to identify proteome trafficking, adjacent interacting proteins, protein interaction identification (split-TurboID), and secreted proteomic profiling. Pulse–chase labeling with radioisotopic amino acids and fluorescent protein-tagged interest proteins can be utilized for pulse–chase analysis or dynamic monitoring of protein trafficking in live cells without disturbing the cellular conditions. However, radiolabeling can induce biohazardous radioisotopes like DNA and cellular damage. Fluorescent protein labeling is typically limited to a few fluorescence channels and can be permanently photobleached. Importantly, proteomic profiling of secreted or trafficking between cells or organelles is impossible in the above technologies.</p><p>TransitID also has several disadvantages. For example, endogenous biotin–protein ligase is localized to the cytosol, and mitochondria can biotinylate several proteins, such as propionyl-CoA carboxylase, pyruvate carboxylase, methylcrotonoyl-CoA carboxylase, and halocarboxylases, altering the cellular metabolic status. In addition, false-positive biotinylated proteins are inevitable when TurboID labeling is used. Second, H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> is required in APEX labeling, limiting its use in vivo. Third, temporal resolution (TurboID labeling requires at least 10 min or more) and sensitivity need to be improved.</p><p>There are various types of cells in the central nervous system, and the protein interactions and communications between each cell are complex and lack corresponding technical analysis. Therefore, this system has application prospects, enabling researchers to decipher proteome trafficking or interactions in vitro and in vivo (APEX labeling is limited) in neuroscience areas, such as the specific cell secretory proteome, cellular protein communications between glial cells and neurons, and protein trafficking between organelles.</p><p>In addition, researchers could combine photogenetics or chemical genetics to manipulate various cell activities and could use TransitID to realize cell activity-dependent proteome analysis. For example, with the combination of optical and genetic methods to control the activity of specific neurons or glial cells accurately, manipulated cells could already express TransitID. Therefore, researchers can utilize these combined methods to analyze the activity-dependent secretory proteome or cellular protein communications between cells and organelles when cell activity is inhibited or increased. With the development of emerging technologies, integration of other new techniques, such as SPEAC-seq<span><sup>4</sup></span> and SynNotch,<span><sup>5</sup></span> is required to thoroughly investigate cell–cell communication. In summary, TurboID coupled with APEX2 has potential applications for deciphering proteome trafficking or interactions in neuroscience.</p><p><b>Hongrui Zhu</b>: Writing—original draft. <b>Sheng Wang</b>: Writing—review and editing.</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p><p>The ethics approval was not needed in this study.</p>","PeriodicalId":94303,"journal":{"name":"Brain-X","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-12-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/brx2.42","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"TurboID coupled with APEX2: Application prospects for deciphering proteome trafficking and interactions in neuroscience\",\"authors\":\"Hongrui Zhu,&nbsp;Sheng Wang\",\"doi\":\"10.1002/brx2.42\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>Proteins are often secreted and transited through cells or multiple organelles in physiological and pathological processes. Various interacting proteins are highly dynamic. Many proteins transiently interact with adjacent proteins with low affinity. This requires highly sensitive equipment for detection. For example, to monitor protein subcellular localization, transport, and interactions, we typically apply routine methods, such as imaging with high-resolution microscopy, to monitor fluorescently tagged proteins in live or formaldehyde-fixed cells. To detect the secreted target protein, we used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and western blotting. Because these methods are not often applied to detect dynamic changes in various proteins, researchers cannot perform protein profiling under diverse conditions. Most technologies can hardly decipher endogenous proteins that transit between specific organelles or cells. Professor Alice Y. Ting from Stanford University recently developed a novel technique called TransitID, and this technique can be expanded to several new applications, especially in neuroscience.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>TransitID is based on proximity labeling (PL) and involves recombining various unrestrained enzymes, such as BioID, TurboID, and APEX2. These recombined enzymes label prey protein molecules near the fusion protein in the vicinity of the spatial region, allowing them to covalently connect known chemical groups, such as biotin or alkyne-phenol (AP), to nearby proteins, thus capturing prey proteins through the purification of reactive groups. PL has been widely used in vitro and in vivo cell systems to monitor and detect protein trafficking or interactions but has not been widely used in neuroscience, except in a few studies to investigate proteins that interact between cell membranes, secreted proteomic profiling, and so on.<span><sup>2, 3</sup></span> Professor Ting's team combined dual-labeled proteins using PL enzymes to distinguish which proteins transited from the “source” location (the first labeling) to the “destination” location (the second labeling) via mass spectrometry. However, the TransitID system, a more delicate technique, has not been used in neuroscience thus far.</p><p>Researchers have developed four cellular applications: mapping cytosol-to-nucleus proteome shuttling, mapping proteome trafficking between the nucleolus and stress granules (SGs), mapping local versus cytosolic translation of mitochondrial proteins, and mapping exchanged endogenous proteins between two different types of cells. TurboID is expressed in the “source” location, and APEX2 is expressed in the “destination” location. Ting et al. found that TurboID can link biotin to substrate proteins. AP can also perform click-based derivatization of APEX2-tagged proteins. AP and biotin have specific affinity, membrane permeability, stability, and efficiency without having issues, such as apparent cytotoxicity, low recovery, or incomplete removal with beads. Moreover, TurboID and APEX2 can be linked with organelle unique targeted signal peptides. TurboID labeling (“source” labeling) is performed first using non-toxic labeling of biotin, and then, excess biotin is washed out and undergoes for proteome trafficking. If proteins from “source” labeling transit to a “destination” location (APEX2 labeling), AP and H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> together can realize an AP link by APEX2-tagged proteins to biotinylated protein substrates, followed by azide-fluorescein. Dual-enriched protein substrates (alkyne handle and biotin substrates) can be enriched with anti-fluorescein immunoprecipitation and streptavidin beads. Thus, TurboID–APEX2 dual-labeled proteins can be identified by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. For example, to decipher proteome shuttling between the nucleus and mitochondria, we can tag TurboID with a nuclear export signal (NES) expressed in the cytoplasm, and APEX2 can be targeted in the mitochondrial matrix. TurboID–NES coupled with APEX2 tagged with the nuclear localization signal can identify cytosol-to-nucleus protein translocation. Using the “sender” cell expressing TurboID–NES co-cultured with the “receiver” cell expressing APEX2–NES, researchers can detect intercellular protein communication (Figure 1).</p><p>The TransitID technique combines the advantages of TurboID and APEX2, which can be widely used to identify proteome trafficking, adjacent interacting proteins, protein interaction identification (split-TurboID), and secreted proteomic profiling. Pulse–chase labeling with radioisotopic amino acids and fluorescent protein-tagged interest proteins can be utilized for pulse–chase analysis or dynamic monitoring of protein trafficking in live cells without disturbing the cellular conditions. However, radiolabeling can induce biohazardous radioisotopes like DNA and cellular damage. Fluorescent protein labeling is typically limited to a few fluorescence channels and can be permanently photobleached. Importantly, proteomic profiling of secreted or trafficking between cells or organelles is impossible in the above technologies.</p><p>TransitID also has several disadvantages. For example, endogenous biotin–protein ligase is localized to the cytosol, and mitochondria can biotinylate several proteins, such as propionyl-CoA carboxylase, pyruvate carboxylase, methylcrotonoyl-CoA carboxylase, and halocarboxylases, altering the cellular metabolic status. In addition, false-positive biotinylated proteins are inevitable when TurboID labeling is used. Second, H<sub>2</sub>O<sub>2</sub> is required in APEX labeling, limiting its use in vivo. Third, temporal resolution (TurboID labeling requires at least 10 min or more) and sensitivity need to be improved.</p><p>There are various types of cells in the central nervous system, and the protein interactions and communications between each cell are complex and lack corresponding technical analysis. Therefore, this system has application prospects, enabling researchers to decipher proteome trafficking or interactions in vitro and in vivo (APEX labeling is limited) in neuroscience areas, such as the specific cell secretory proteome, cellular protein communications between glial cells and neurons, and protein trafficking between organelles.</p><p>In addition, researchers could combine photogenetics or chemical genetics to manipulate various cell activities and could use TransitID to realize cell activity-dependent proteome analysis. For example, with the combination of optical and genetic methods to control the activity of specific neurons or glial cells accurately, manipulated cells could already express TransitID. Therefore, researchers can utilize these combined methods to analyze the activity-dependent secretory proteome or cellular protein communications between cells and organelles when cell activity is inhibited or increased. With the development of emerging technologies, integration of other new techniques, such as SPEAC-seq<span><sup>4</sup></span> and SynNotch,<span><sup>5</sup></span> is required to thoroughly investigate cell–cell communication. In summary, TurboID coupled with APEX2 has potential applications for deciphering proteome trafficking or interactions in neuroscience.</p><p><b>Hongrui Zhu</b>: Writing—original draft. <b>Sheng Wang</b>: Writing—review and editing.</p><p>The authors declare no conflicts of interest.</p><p>The ethics approval was not needed in this study.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":94303,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Brain-X\",\"volume\":null,\"pages\":null},\"PeriodicalIF\":0.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-12-07\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/brx2.42\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Brain-X\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"1085\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/brx2.42\",\"RegionNum\":0,\"RegionCategory\":null,\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"\",\"JCRName\":\"\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Brain-X","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/brx2.42","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

摘要

在生理和病理过程中,蛋白质经常通过细胞或多个细胞器分泌和转运。各种相互作用的蛋白质是高度动态的。许多蛋白质与邻近的低亲和力蛋白质短暂地相互作用。这需要高灵敏度的检测设备。例如,为了监测蛋白质亚细胞定位、运输和相互作用,我们通常采用常规方法,如高分辨率显微镜成像,来监测活细胞或甲醛固定细胞中的荧光标记蛋白质。为了检测分泌的靶蛋白,我们采用酶联免疫吸附法和免疫印迹法。由于这些方法不常用于检测各种蛋白质的动态变化,研究人员无法在不同条件下进行蛋白质谱分析。大多数技术很难破译在特定细胞器或细胞之间传递的内源性蛋白质。斯坦福大学的Alice Y. Ting教授最近开发了一种名为TransitID的新技术,这项技术可以扩展到几个新的应用领域,特别是在神经科学领域。1 . transitid是基于邻近标记(PL),涉及重组各种不受限制的酶,如BioID, TurboID和APEX2。这些重组酶在融合蛋白附近的空间区域标记猎物蛋白分子,允许它们将已知的化学基团(如生物素或炔酚(AP))共价连接到附近的蛋白质上,从而通过纯化反应基团捕获猎物蛋白质。PL已广泛用于体外和体内细胞系统中监测和检测蛋白质运输或相互作用,但尚未广泛用于神经科学,除了在少数研究中研究细胞膜之间相互作用的蛋白质,分泌的蛋白质组学分析等。2,3 Ting教授的团队使用PL酶结合双标记蛋白质,通过质谱分析区分哪些蛋白质从“源”位置(第一次标记)转移到“目的”位置(第二次标记)。然而,TransitID系统,一种更精细的技术,迄今尚未在神经科学中使用。研究人员已经开发了四种细胞应用:绘制细胞质到细胞核的蛋白质组穿梭图,绘制核核和应激颗粒(SGs)之间的蛋白质组运输图,绘制线粒体蛋白质的局部与细胞质翻译图,以及绘制两种不同类型细胞之间交换的内源性蛋白质图。TurboID在“源”位置表示,APEX2在“目的”位置表示。Ting等人发现TurboID可以将生物素与底物蛋白连接起来。AP还可以对apex2标记的蛋白进行基于点击的衍生化。AP和生物素具有特定的亲和力、膜渗透性、稳定性和效率,而不存在诸如明显的细胞毒性、低回收率或微球不完全去除等问题。此外,TurboID和APEX2可以与细胞器独特的靶向信号肽连接。TurboID标记(“来源”标记)首先使用生物素的无毒标记进行,然后,多余的生物素被洗掉并进行蛋白质组运输。如果蛋白质从“源”标记转运到“目的”位置(APEX2标记),AP和H2O2一起可以实现APEX2标记的蛋白质与生物素化的蛋白质底物的AP连接,然后是叠氮荧光素。双富集蛋白底物(炔柄和生物素底物)可以用抗荧光素免疫沉淀和链亲和素珠富集。因此,TurboID-APEX2双标记蛋白可以通过液相色谱和质谱法进行鉴定。例如,为了破译蛋白质组在细胞核和线粒体之间穿梭,我们可以用细胞质中表达的核输出信号(NES)标记TurboID,而APEX2可以靶向线粒体基质。TurboID-NES与标记有核定位信号的APEX2偶联可以识别细胞质到细胞核的蛋白易位。利用表达TurboID - nes的“发送者”细胞与表达APEX2 - nes的“接收者”细胞共培养,研究人员可以检测细胞间蛋白质通讯(图1)。TransitID技术结合了TurboID和APEX2的优点,可广泛用于鉴定蛋白质组运输、相邻相互作用蛋白、蛋白质相互作用鉴定(分裂-TurboID)和分泌蛋白质组学分析。利用放射性同位素氨基酸和荧光蛋白标记的兴趣蛋白进行脉冲追踪标记,可以在不干扰细胞条件的情况下进行脉冲追踪分析或动态监测活细胞中的蛋白质运输。然而,放射性标签可能导致生物有害的放射性同位素,如DNA和细胞损伤。荧光蛋白标记通常局限于几个荧光通道,并且可以永久地光漂白。 重要的是,在上述技术中不可能对细胞或细胞器之间的分泌或运输进行蛋白质组学分析。TransitID也有几个缺点。例如,内源性生物素-蛋白连接酶定位于细胞质,线粒体可以对几种蛋白质进行生物素化,如丙酰辅酶a羧化酶、丙酮酸羧化酶、甲基丙烯酰辅酶a羧化酶和盐羧化酶,从而改变细胞代谢状态。此外,当使用TurboID标记时,生物素化蛋白的假阳性是不可避免的。其次,APEX标记需要H2O2,限制了其在体内的使用。第三,时间分辨率(TurboID标记至少需要10分钟或更长时间)和灵敏度需要提高。中枢神经系统细胞种类繁多,各细胞之间的蛋白质相互作用和通讯复杂,缺乏相应的技术分析。因此,该系统具有应用前景,使研究人员能够破译神经科学领域的蛋白质组运输或体外和体内相互作用(APEX标记有限),如特异性细胞分泌蛋白质组,胶质细胞与神经元之间的细胞蛋白质通讯,细胞器之间的蛋白质运输。此外,研究人员可以结合光遗传学或化学遗传学来操纵各种细胞活性,并可以使用TransitID来实现细胞活性依赖的蛋白质组分析。例如,通过结合光学和遗传方法来精确控制特定神经元或神经胶质细胞的活动,被操纵的细胞已经可以表达TransitID。因此,研究人员可以利用这些组合方法来分析当细胞活性被抑制或增加时,细胞与细胞器之间的活性依赖性分泌蛋白质组或细胞蛋白质通讯。随着新兴技术的发展,需要整合其他新技术,如SPEAC-seq4和SynNotch,5来深入研究细胞间的通讯。综上所述,TurboID结合APEX2在神经科学中破译蛋白质组运输或相互作用方面具有潜在的应用前景。朱红瑞:写作——原稿。王生:写作、评审、编辑。作者声明无利益冲突。本研究不需要伦理批准。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

TurboID coupled with APEX2: Application prospects for deciphering proteome trafficking and interactions in neuroscience

TurboID coupled with APEX2: Application prospects for deciphering proteome trafficking and interactions in neuroscience

Proteins are often secreted and transited through cells or multiple organelles in physiological and pathological processes. Various interacting proteins are highly dynamic. Many proteins transiently interact with adjacent proteins with low affinity. This requires highly sensitive equipment for detection. For example, to monitor protein subcellular localization, transport, and interactions, we typically apply routine methods, such as imaging with high-resolution microscopy, to monitor fluorescently tagged proteins in live or formaldehyde-fixed cells. To detect the secreted target protein, we used enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays and western blotting. Because these methods are not often applied to detect dynamic changes in various proteins, researchers cannot perform protein profiling under diverse conditions. Most technologies can hardly decipher endogenous proteins that transit between specific organelles or cells. Professor Alice Y. Ting from Stanford University recently developed a novel technique called TransitID, and this technique can be expanded to several new applications, especially in neuroscience.1

TransitID is based on proximity labeling (PL) and involves recombining various unrestrained enzymes, such as BioID, TurboID, and APEX2. These recombined enzymes label prey protein molecules near the fusion protein in the vicinity of the spatial region, allowing them to covalently connect known chemical groups, such as biotin or alkyne-phenol (AP), to nearby proteins, thus capturing prey proteins through the purification of reactive groups. PL has been widely used in vitro and in vivo cell systems to monitor and detect protein trafficking or interactions but has not been widely used in neuroscience, except in a few studies to investigate proteins that interact between cell membranes, secreted proteomic profiling, and so on.2, 3 Professor Ting's team combined dual-labeled proteins using PL enzymes to distinguish which proteins transited from the “source” location (the first labeling) to the “destination” location (the second labeling) via mass spectrometry. However, the TransitID system, a more delicate technique, has not been used in neuroscience thus far.

Researchers have developed four cellular applications: mapping cytosol-to-nucleus proteome shuttling, mapping proteome trafficking between the nucleolus and stress granules (SGs), mapping local versus cytosolic translation of mitochondrial proteins, and mapping exchanged endogenous proteins between two different types of cells. TurboID is expressed in the “source” location, and APEX2 is expressed in the “destination” location. Ting et al. found that TurboID can link biotin to substrate proteins. AP can also perform click-based derivatization of APEX2-tagged proteins. AP and biotin have specific affinity, membrane permeability, stability, and efficiency without having issues, such as apparent cytotoxicity, low recovery, or incomplete removal with beads. Moreover, TurboID and APEX2 can be linked with organelle unique targeted signal peptides. TurboID labeling (“source” labeling) is performed first using non-toxic labeling of biotin, and then, excess biotin is washed out and undergoes for proteome trafficking. If proteins from “source” labeling transit to a “destination” location (APEX2 labeling), AP and H2O2 together can realize an AP link by APEX2-tagged proteins to biotinylated protein substrates, followed by azide-fluorescein. Dual-enriched protein substrates (alkyne handle and biotin substrates) can be enriched with anti-fluorescein immunoprecipitation and streptavidin beads. Thus, TurboID–APEX2 dual-labeled proteins can be identified by liquid chromatography and mass spectrometry. For example, to decipher proteome shuttling between the nucleus and mitochondria, we can tag TurboID with a nuclear export signal (NES) expressed in the cytoplasm, and APEX2 can be targeted in the mitochondrial matrix. TurboID–NES coupled with APEX2 tagged with the nuclear localization signal can identify cytosol-to-nucleus protein translocation. Using the “sender” cell expressing TurboID–NES co-cultured with the “receiver” cell expressing APEX2–NES, researchers can detect intercellular protein communication (Figure 1).

The TransitID technique combines the advantages of TurboID and APEX2, which can be widely used to identify proteome trafficking, adjacent interacting proteins, protein interaction identification (split-TurboID), and secreted proteomic profiling. Pulse–chase labeling with radioisotopic amino acids and fluorescent protein-tagged interest proteins can be utilized for pulse–chase analysis or dynamic monitoring of protein trafficking in live cells without disturbing the cellular conditions. However, radiolabeling can induce biohazardous radioisotopes like DNA and cellular damage. Fluorescent protein labeling is typically limited to a few fluorescence channels and can be permanently photobleached. Importantly, proteomic profiling of secreted or trafficking between cells or organelles is impossible in the above technologies.

TransitID also has several disadvantages. For example, endogenous biotin–protein ligase is localized to the cytosol, and mitochondria can biotinylate several proteins, such as propionyl-CoA carboxylase, pyruvate carboxylase, methylcrotonoyl-CoA carboxylase, and halocarboxylases, altering the cellular metabolic status. In addition, false-positive biotinylated proteins are inevitable when TurboID labeling is used. Second, H2O2 is required in APEX labeling, limiting its use in vivo. Third, temporal resolution (TurboID labeling requires at least 10 min or more) and sensitivity need to be improved.

There are various types of cells in the central nervous system, and the protein interactions and communications between each cell are complex and lack corresponding technical analysis. Therefore, this system has application prospects, enabling researchers to decipher proteome trafficking or interactions in vitro and in vivo (APEX labeling is limited) in neuroscience areas, such as the specific cell secretory proteome, cellular protein communications between glial cells and neurons, and protein trafficking between organelles.

In addition, researchers could combine photogenetics or chemical genetics to manipulate various cell activities and could use TransitID to realize cell activity-dependent proteome analysis. For example, with the combination of optical and genetic methods to control the activity of specific neurons or glial cells accurately, manipulated cells could already express TransitID. Therefore, researchers can utilize these combined methods to analyze the activity-dependent secretory proteome or cellular protein communications between cells and organelles when cell activity is inhibited or increased. With the development of emerging technologies, integration of other new techniques, such as SPEAC-seq4 and SynNotch,5 is required to thoroughly investigate cell–cell communication. In summary, TurboID coupled with APEX2 has potential applications for deciphering proteome trafficking or interactions in neuroscience.

Hongrui Zhu: Writing—original draft. Sheng Wang: Writing—review and editing.

The authors declare no conflicts of interest.

The ethics approval was not needed in this study.

求助全文
通过发布文献求助,成功后即可免费获取论文全文。 去求助
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:481959085
Book学术官方微信