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Mol. Cells 2006; 22(1): 119-125

Published online January 1, 1970

© The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology

New Protein Extraction/Solubilization Protocol for Gel-based Proteomics of Rat (Female) Whole Brain and Brain Regions

Misato Hirano, Randeep Rakwal, Junko Shibato, Ganesh Kumar Agrawal, Nam-Soo Jwa, Hitoshi Iwahashi, Yoshinori Masuo

Abstract

The rat is an accepted model for studying human psychiatric/neurological disorders. We provide a protocol for total soluble protein extraction using trichloroacetic acid/acetone (TCA/A) from rat (female) whole brain, 10 brain regions and the pituitary gland, and show that two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DGE) using pre-cast immobilized pH (4-7) gradient (IPG) strip gels (13 cm) in the first dimension yields clean silver nitrate stained protein profiles. Though TCA/A precipitation may not be “ideal”, the important choice here is the selection of an appropriate lysis buffer (LB) for solubilizing precipitated proteins. Our results reveal enrichment of protein spots by use of individual brain regions rather than whole brain, as well as the presence of differentially expressed spots in their proteomes. Thus individual brain regions provide improved protein coverage and are better suited for differential protein detection. Moreover, using a phosphoprotein-specific dye, in-gel detection of phosphoproteins was demonstrated. Representative high-resolution silver nitrate stained proteome profiles of rat whole brain total soluble protein are presented. Shortcomings apart (failure to separate membrane proteins), gel-based proteomics remains a viable option, and 2-DGE is the method of choice for generating high-resolution proteome maps of rat brain and brain regions.

Keywords Gel-based Proteomics; IPG; Lysis Buffer; Peptide Mass Fingerprinting; Rat Brain; TCA/Acetone.

Article

Communication

Mol. Cells 2006; 22(1): 119-125

Published online August 31, 2006

Copyright © The Korean Society for Molecular and Cellular Biology.

New Protein Extraction/Solubilization Protocol for Gel-based Proteomics of Rat (Female) Whole Brain and Brain Regions

Misato Hirano, Randeep Rakwal, Junko Shibato, Ganesh Kumar Agrawal, Nam-Soo Jwa, Hitoshi Iwahashi, Yoshinori Masuo

Abstract

The rat is an accepted model for studying human psychiatric/neurological disorders. We provide a protocol for total soluble protein extraction using trichloroacetic acid/acetone (TCA/A) from rat (female) whole brain, 10 brain regions and the pituitary gland, and show that two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2-DGE) using pre-cast immobilized pH (4-7) gradient (IPG) strip gels (13 cm) in the first dimension yields clean silver nitrate stained protein profiles. Though TCA/A precipitation may not be “ideal”, the important choice here is the selection of an appropriate lysis buffer (LB) for solubilizing precipitated proteins. Our results reveal enrichment of protein spots by use of individual brain regions rather than whole brain, as well as the presence of differentially expressed spots in their proteomes. Thus individual brain regions provide improved protein coverage and are better suited for differential protein detection. Moreover, using a phosphoprotein-specific dye, in-gel detection of phosphoproteins was demonstrated. Representative high-resolution silver nitrate stained proteome profiles of rat whole brain total soluble protein are presented. Shortcomings apart (failure to separate membrane proteins), gel-based proteomics remains a viable option, and 2-DGE is the method of choice for generating high-resolution proteome maps of rat brain and brain regions.

Keywords: Gel-based Proteomics, IPG, Lysis Buffer, Peptide Mass Fingerprinting, Rat Brain, TCA/Acetone.

Mol. Cells
Nov 30, 2023 Vol.46 No.11, pp. 655~725
COVER PICTURE
Kim et al. (pp. 710-724) demonstrated that a pathogen-derived Ralstonia pseudosolanacearum type III effector RipL delays flowering time and enhances susceptibility to bacterial infection in Arabidopsis thaliana. Shown is the RipL-expressing Arabidopsis plant, which displays general dampening of the transcriptional program during pathogen infection, grown in long-day conditions.

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