A protocol for the application of paramagnetic relaxation enhancement NMR spectroscopy to detect weak and transient inter- and intra-molecular interactions in intrinsically disordered proteins is presented.
Intrinsically disordered proteins and intrinsically disordered regions within proteins make up a large and functionally significant part of the human proteome. The highly flexible nature of these sequences allows them to form weak, long-range, and transient interactions with diverse biomolecular partners. Specific yet low-affinity interactions promote promiscuous binding and enable a single intrinsically disordered segment to interact with a multitude of target sites. Because of the transient nature of these interactions, they can be difficult to characterize by structural biology methods that rely on proteins to form a single, predominant conformation. Paramagnetic relaxation enhancement NMR is a useful tool for identifying and defining the structural underpinning of weak and transient interactions. A detailed protocol for using paramagnetic relaxation enhancement to characterize the lowly-populated encounter complexes that form between intrinsically disordered proteins and their protein, nucleic acid, or other biomolecular partners is described.
Intrinsic disorder (ID) describes proteins (IDPs) or regions within proteins (IDRs) that do not spontaneously fold into stable secondary or tertiary structures but are biologically active. Generally, the function of IDP/IDRs is to facilitate specific yet reversible interactions with biomolecules at physiological conditions1. Thus, IDPs and IDRs are involved in a range of cellular functions, including recruitment, organization, and stabilization of multi-protein complexes, for example, the assembly and activity of the spliceosome2, recruitment and organization of components at sites of DNA damage3, organization, and stabilization of the recruitment of transcription complexes4, or of the chromatin remodeler BAF5. Additionally, IDPs are found at signaling nexuses where their promiscuity for different binding partners enables them to mediate information transfer through cellular protein networks6. Recent work has also revealed a proclivity for IDR regions to self-associate forming biomolecular condensates through the process of liquid-liquid phase separation7. Many of the aforementioned functions involving ID are also now thought to involve some aspect of condensate formation8. Despite the importance of ID for biomolecular complex assembly, stabilization, scaffolding, and signal transduction, the atomic details of their specific interactions are difficult to identify since IDPs and IDRs are typically not amenable to structural investigations using x-ray crystallography or cryogenic electron microscopy.
Nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) is an ideal technique for investigating ID as it is not dependent on the presence of rigid or homogenous structural ensembles but reports on the immediate local environment of individual nuclei. The resonant frequency, or chemical shift, of a nucleus in a given molecule is influenced by weak magnetic fields induced by the local electronic distribution, which in turn is dependent on bond lengths, angles, nearness of other nuclei, interactions with binding partners, and other factors9. Thus, each nucleus acts as a unique, site-specific structural probe sensitive to changes in its local chemical environment. Despite these advantages, NMR is a bulk technique, and the observed chemical shift is the average of all the environments sampled by a particular nucleus. A range of NMR techniques, many of which are described in this issue, have been developed to recover structural, dynamic, and kinetic information about high energy, lowly-populated biomolecular conformations contained in the averaged chemical shift10,11. Although transiently populated, identification and quantification of these states are important for determining the details of functional mechanisms12. For example, in the case of IDPs and IDRs, the conformational ensemble may be biased to preferentially sample conformations that are productive for the formation of encounter complexes with physiological binding partners. Detection of these states, as well as identification of the residue-specific inter- and intra-molecular interactions and dynamics, are important to determine the underlying structural mechanisms of protein function and complex formation.
A protocol for using paramagnetic relaxation enhancement (PRE) NMR to investigate transient, lowly-populated states important for the formation of IDP/IDR-mediated biomolecular complexes is described13. This approach is useful for studying the transient protein-protein interactions such as those that promote the assembly of amyloid fibrils from α-synuclein14,15 or the self-association of FUS16, as well as to characterize specific protein-protein interactions such as between signaling proteins17. An example of a self-associating IDP is presented, where specific inter- and intra-molecular interactions result in preferentially compacted states as well as site-specific interactions that drive self-association.
The PRE arises from the magnetic dipolar interaction of a nucleus to a paramagnetic center with an isotropic g-tensor, commonly supplied in the form of an unpaired electron on a nitroxide group or as a paramagnetic metal atom18 (Figure 1). While atoms with anisotropic g-tensors also produce a PRE effect, analysis of these systems is more difficult due to confounding effects contributed by the pseudo-contact shifts (PCS) or residual dipolar coupling (RDC)13,19. The strength of the interaction between a nucleus and the paramagnetic center is dependent on the <r-6> distance between the two. This interaction results in an increase in nuclear relaxation rates, which causes detectable line broadening even for long-range interactions (~10-35 Å), because the magnetic moment of the unpaired electron is so strong20,21. Detection of transient states with the PRE is possible if the following two conditions are met; (1) the transient interaction is in fast exchange on the NMR timescale (observed chemical shift is a population-weighted average of the exchanging states); and (2) the nuclei to paramagnetic center distance is shorter in the transiently populated state than in the major state11. The transverse PRE is denoted Γ2 and, for practical purposes, is calculated from the difference in 1H transverse relaxation rates between a sample containing a paramagnetic center and a diamagnetic control. For an in-depth treatment of the theory of the PRE and related pseudocontact shifts in fast and slow exchange regimes, the reader is referred to the comprehensive reviews by Clore and co-workers13,22. Here, only the situation where 1HN–Γ2 is in the fast exchange regime is considered, where because of the r-6-dependence of the PRE, the observed relaxation rate is related to both the distance to which the paramagnetic center approaches the nucleus as well as the amount of time it spends in that conformation. Therefore, transient conformations that do not involve a close approach produce a small PRE while closer interactions, even if short-lived, will produce a larger PRE.
For IDPs, the PRE is used to measure and differentiate the interactions occurring within a single molecule (intramolecular) and between separate molecules (intermolecular). By attaching a paramagnetic center to an NMR visible (e.g., 15N-labeled) or NMR invisible (e.g., natural abundance 14N) protein, the source (inter- or intra-molecular) of the PRE may be determined (Figure 2). Site-directed mutagenesis that introduces a cysteine residue is a convenient approach to attach a paramagnetic center (spin-label) to a protein23. Several types of molecules have been proposed for use as spin labels, including metal chelating (EDTA-based) and free-radical (nitroxide-based)24. Various nitroxide spin labels have been described and are available with different cysteine-reactive chemistries such as methanethiosulphonate, maleimide, and iodoacetamide25,26 (Figure 1). Inherent flexibility of the tag or of the linker may be problematic for certain analyses, and in these situations, different strategies have been proposed to limit the motion of the tag, such as by adding bulky chemical groups or the use of a second linker to anchor the tag to the protein (two site attachment)27,28. Additionally, commercially available tags may contain diastereomeric proteins but generally this will not contribute to the observed PRE29. The use of the 3-Maleimido-PROXYL attached to a free cysteine via maleimide chemistry is described since it is readily available, cost-effective, non-reversible, and the reducing agent tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) can be maintained in the solution throughout the labeling reaction. Since 3-Maleimido-PROXYL has an isotropic g-tensor, no PCS or RDCs are induced, and the same chemical shift assignments can be used for both the paramagnetic and diamagnetic samples13.
The 1HN–T2 is measured using a two time-point strategy (Ta, Tb) that has previously been shown to be as accurate as collecting a full evolution series consisting of 8 to 12 time points30. The first time point (Ta) is set as close to zero as practical, and the optimal length of the second time point is dependent on the magnitude of the largest expected PRE for a given sample and can be estimated from: Tb ~ 1.15/(R2,dia + Γ2) where R2,dia represents the R2 of the diamagnetic sample13. If the magnitude of the largest PREs is unknown, setting Tb to ~ one times the 1H T2 of the protein is a good initial estimate and further optimized by adjusting T2 to improve the signal to noise. This two-point measurement strategy significantly reduces the experimental time required to measure PREs and allows time for more signal averaging, particularly since relatively dilute samples are used to minimize the effects of non-specific contacts between molecules. An HSQC-based pulse sequence is used to measure 1HN–T2 and has been described in detail elsewhere30. For improved sensitivity, the hard pulses of the forward and back INEPT transfers may be replaced with shaped pulses; alternatively, the sequence is readily converted to a TROSY-based readout31. Since IDPs typically have much longer transverse relaxation rates resulting in narrower line widths (due to the inherent disorder) than similarly sized globular proteins, long acquisition times in the indirect dimension may be used to improve spectral resolution and alleviate the chemical shift dispersion limitation inherent for IDPs.
PRE is a useful tool for studying protein-protein and protein-nucleic acid interactions, particularly interactions that are transient or lowly populated. A detailed protocol for the preparation of an NMR sample suitable for measuring PREs, including steps for protein purification, site-directed spin labeling, setting up and calibrating the pulse program, processing, and interpreting the NMR data, is provided. Important experimental considerations are noted throughout that may impact data quality and experimental outcome, including sample concentration, selection of the spin-label, and removal of paramagnetic components.
General requirements for the protocol: protein purification facilities, UV-Vis spectrometer, high-field NMR spectrometer and operating software, post-processing analysis software including; NMRPipe32, Sparky33, (or CCPN Analysis34, or NMRViewJ35).
1. Recombinant expression and purification of a protein for PRE measurements
2. Conjugating the 3-Maleimido-PROXYL nitroxide spin label
3. Prepare NMR sample for measuring intra- or inter-molecular PRE
4. Set up NMR spectrometer and experiment specific parameters
5. Setup the 1HN–T2 experiment
6. Make a diamagnetic sample by reducing spin-label with ascorbic acid
7. Process paramagnetic and diamagnetic spectra
8. Transfer resonance assignments and extract peak heights
9. Extract 1HN–T2 rates for each residue and calculate PRE
Intramolecular 1HN–Γ2 PREs were recorded on a self-associating, intrinsically disordered fragment (residues 171-264) derived from the low-complexity domain of the RNA-binding protein EWSR142 (Figure 3). Residues in close sequential proximity to the spin-label attachment point (e.g., residue 178 or 260 in Figure 3) are expected to be significantly broadened and are not detectable in the spectrum. Residues sequentially spaced from the attachment point yet show enhanced Γ2 were spatially close (10-35 Å) to the spin-label. In the case of EWSR1 171-264, attributing the source of the PRE effect is complicated since it may arise from a combination of inter- and intra- residue contacts and is dependent on the distance from the nucleus to the paramagnetic center, the population of that conformation, and the dynamics of the vector connecting the electron and nuclear spins. Further, the magnitude of PREs arising from intramolecular contacts is not concentration-dependent, while PREs arising from intermolecular contacts depend on concentration as well as the kinetics and dynamics of the association between protein molecules.
A possible interpretation of these data is that the IDP ensemble samples conformations that are more compact than an extended chain. Alternatively, the PREs could arise from intermolecular contacts responsible for the self-association of EWSR1, or the PREs could be from a combination of both intra- and intermolecular contacts. In the case presented here, what remains unknown is how close the residues approach the spin-label or for how long they remain in close proximity. With highly flexible molecules such as EWSR1 171-264, it can be difficult to qualitatively disentangle these parameters. By placing the spin-label at different residue positions, contacts between different parts of the chain may be identified, providing a more accurate interpretation of specific interactions that may be functionally relevant for self-association (Figure 3). Measuring intermolecular PREs (14N spin-labeled protein mixed with 15N non-spin labeled protein), employing a mutational strategy of residues with larger than average PREs (e.g., residues 196 or 215, Figure 3), and utilizing other biophysical methods such as dynamic light scattering, size exclusion chromatography, and analytical ultracentrifugation, are useful for characterizing the conformational ensemble of an IDP.
Figure 1: Molecules containing an unpaired electron and various functional groups to facilitate attachment to free cysteine residues that are typically used as paramagnetic relaxation agents. Diamagnetic molecules may be used as controls. (A) 3-Maleimido-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxy, free radical (3-Maleimido-PROXYL) (B) 3-Carboxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxy, free radical (3-Carboxy-PROXYL) (C) 3-(2-Iodoacetamido)-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-1-pyrrolidinyloxy, free radical (3-(2 – Iodoacetamido-PROXYL) (D) 1-Oxyl-2,2,5,5-tetramethylpyrrolidin-3-yl) Methyl Methanethiosulfonate (MTSL) (E) (1-Acetoxy-2,2,5,5-tetramethyl-δ-3-pyrroline-3-methyl) Methanethiosulfonate (Acetoxy-MTSL) Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Depiction of intra- and intermolecular PRE. (A) Intramolecular PRE, the red circle represents the effective radius of a paramagnetic center attached to a 15N-labeled protein. The PRE effect decreases with an <r-6> dependence on distance from the paramagnetic molecule. (B) Intermolecular PRE, the paramagnetic group (red circle), is located on a 14N (natural abundance) protein (blue) that is invisible to NMR. The effects of the paramagnetic group on the non-NMR active protein are observed as increased relaxation rates when it comes into close contact with the 15N protein (black). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: 1HN–Γ2 rates for residues 171-264 of the intrinsically disordered domain of EWSR1. A serine residue at position (A) 178 or (B) 260 that has been mutated to a cysteine serves as the attachment point for a 3-Maleimido-PROXYL spin-label (red *). Increased relaxation rates occur at the location of the tag, other sites of increased relaxation are indicative of intramolecular interactions. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
A method for characterizing transient interactions that exist at low populations between intrinsically disordered proteins and various binding partners using PRE has been presented. In the example shown, the protein is self-associating, and thus the PRE may arise from a combination of inter and intramolecular interactions. This method is readily extended to heterogeneous samples where the interactions between two different proteins may be characterized. Complementary information about how different regions of the protein interact is available by placing the spin-label at different positions within the protein. Additionally, by alternating the spin-label between NMR active (15N) and NMR inactive (14N) species, the intra- and inter-molecular sources of observed PRE may be differentiated from one another, providing information about encounter complexes. The experiment outlined here can report on encounter complex interactions even if they occur on a microsecond timescale13.
Central to this method is the incorporation of a spin-label tag into the protein of interest by attachment to a cysteine residue. Some proteins may contain a native cysteine that is suitable (does not participate in disulfide bonds, is surface exposed) for attaching a spin-label. For IDPs, solvent exposure of cysteine is usually not an issue. In the majority of cases, it is desirable to introduce cysteines as conservative mutations (serine to cysteine or other uncharged polar amino acids to cysteine) using site-directed mutagenesis43. In the example presented, the fragment of EWSR1 does not contain native cysteines and is enriched in serines; thus, devising a mutational strategy was straightforward. Proteins that contain native cysteine(s) present a more complicated case, and care needs to be taken to not disrupt the native function (e.g., break a structurally important disulfide bond)44. Further, to incorporate a single cysteine for spin-labeling, the native cysteines must be mutated to a residue that does not react with the spin-label (no mercapto group) and based on its size and other properties, serine is a good substitute for cysteine. If native cysteines need to be mutated, careful characterization of the mutants is required to ensure they maintain native structure and function is essential. Simple 1H,15N HSQCs of mutants in comparison to the wildtype protein are powerful indicators of perturbations (even minor) to protein structure, and this approach is also useful for IDPs45. Other methods to consider are circular dichroism, analytical ultracentrifugation, or biochemical approaches such as activity assays46.
Technical considerations for obtaining reproducible, rigorous, high-quality data include the removal of ionic impurities during the preparation of the NMR sample. This is achieved by passing all solutions over chelating resin prior to use. Further, using a properly degassed buffer is important during the attachment of the nitroxide spin label as the presence of oxygen can reduce the efficiency of labeling. Diamagnetic contamination will contribute to a decrease in the observed PRE; however, the effect is less pronounced on intramolecular PREs and can be reduced by decreasing ΔT13. Therefore, it is not necessary to obtain 100% label incorporation to proceed with the experiment, particularly for the qualitative interpretation presented here. If free cysteines from incomplete spin-label attachment are problematic, some mercapto-reactive chemistries (e.g., maleimide) are amenable to maintaining a reducing agent in the sample throughout the experiment26. It is important that the paramagnetic and diamagnetic samples match each other as closely as possible. When reducing the spin-label with ascorbic acid to create a diamagnetic control, consider the dilution factor introduced from titrating in an ascorbic acid stock solution. This dilution can be minimized by maintaining the ascorbic acid stock at least 10x the expected working concentration in the NMR buffer.
There are many software packages available for analyzing NMR data, including NMRPipe32, Sparky33, CCPN Analysis34, NMRViewJ35, among others. The combination of NMRPipe for spectral processing and Sparky for spectral analysis (peak picking and quantification) was described here due to the ease of use of this combination. NMRPipe is commonly used by many NMR groups for spectral processing, but the NMRPipe suite contains the tools necessary for completing all steps of the analysis, albeit with a significant learning curve. Data may also be processed using the NMR spectrometer control software. Sparky was chosen for spectral analysis because of its ease of use and rapid uptake by novice users. There are several options available for spectral analysis (peak picking and measuring peak heights) that can easily substitute for the functionality of Sparky including CCPN Analysis, or NMRViewJ. Notably, many of these programs have overlapping functionalities and the user is advised to select the combination of programs with which they are most comfortable.
Poor chemical shift dispersion is an inherent problem with IDPs leading to significant resonance overlap and introduction of error into the measurement of peak height. Different strategies have been proposed to alleviate this problem. One of the most straightforward, and the one employed here, is to take advantage of the long transverse relaxation characteristic of IDPs and simply extend the acquisition time in the 15N (indirect) dimension. Alternatively, the triple resonance HNCO experiment is useful for resolving resonance overlap in IDPs due to the superior dispersion of C' resonances. Both TROSY and HSQC versions of the HNCO for measuring PREs have been proposed and are described elsewhere47. However, the improved resolution is not always significant enough to warrant the increased complexity of the experiment, longer time for data collection, and added cost for preparing a suitable sample (enrichment of 13C). This is indeed the case for EWSR1 171-264 presented here, where no significant improvement in the number of non-overlapped residues was observed between a TROSY-HNCO and an 1H, 15N HSQC collected with long acquisition time in the indirect dimension.
This procedure outlined above focuses on the utility of PRE experiments for characterizing weak interactions that exist within and between intrinsically disordered proteins. The PRE has a much broader utility in biomolecular NMR, including determining long-range structural restraints and quantitative determination of sparsely populated conformational states. For example, Clore and co-workers have pioneered the use of the PRE to detect and quantify transient interactions arising from interactions between individual domains of a single protein48 or between the subunits of assembled protein complexes17. There are many examples of the PRE used to derive long-range distance restraints, including for large proteins49, or with novel PRE tags50, to help determine the overall fold of a protein51, as well as in highly paramagnetic systems52. Finally, while PCS is beyond the scope of this discussion, they have been applied to important biomolecular problems which have been described elsewhere53. The method presented above is suitable for probing the conformation and interactions of IDPs using PREs and was designed to be accessible for novice users. For more quantitative approaches to the analysis of the PRE, the user is referred to the many excellent articles referenced within11,24,30,31.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
We thank Drs. Jinfa Ying and Kristin Cano for helpful discussions and technical assistance. DSL is a St. Baldrick's Scholar and acknowledges the support of the St. Baldrick's Foundation (634706). This work was supported in part by the Welch Foundation (AQ-2001-20190330) to DSL, the Max and Minnie Tomerlin Voelcker Fund (Voelcker Foundation Young Investigator Grant to DSL), UTHSA Start-Up Funds to DSL, and a Greehey Graduate Fellowship in Children's Health to CNJ. This work is based upon research conducted in the Structural Biology Core Facilities, part of the Institutional Research Cores at the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio supported by the Office of the Vice President for Research and the Mays Cancer Center Drug Discovery and Structural Biology Shared Resource (NIH P30 CA054174).
0.45 µm and 0.22 µm syringe filters | Millipore Sigma | SLHVM33RS SLGVR33RS |
Filter lysate before first purification step and before size exclusion chromatography. |
100 mm Petri Dish | Fisher | FB0875713 | Agar plates for bacterial transformation. |
14N Ammonium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | 576794 | Use of 15N in M9 medium will produce an NMR visible protein, 14N will produces an NMR invisible protein |
15N Ammonium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | 299251 | Use of 15N in M9 medium will produce an NMR visible protein, 14N will produces an NMR invisible protein |
3 L Fernbach baffled flask | Corning | 431523 | Bacterial expression culture |
3-Maleimido-Proxyl | Sigma Aldrich | 253375 | Nitroxide spin label |
50 mL conical centrifuge tubes | Thermo Fisher | 14-432-22 | Solution/protein storage |
Amicon centrifugal filter | Millipore Sigma | UFC900308 | Protein concentration |
Ampicillan | Sigma Aldrich | A5354 | Antibiotic for a selective marker, exact choice depends on the expression construct plasmid |
Analytical balance | Oahus | 30061978 | Explorer Pro, for weighing reagents |
Ascorbic acid | Sigma Aldrich | AX1775 | Reduces nitroxide spin label |
Autoclave | Sterilize glassware and culture media | ||
Calcium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | C4901 | M9 media component |
Centrifuge bottles | Thermo Fisher | 010-1459 | Harvest E. coli cells after recombinant protein expression |
Centrifuge, hand-crank | Thomas Scientific | 0241C68 | Boekel hand-driven, low-speed centrifuge with 15 mL buckets that can accommodate NMR tubes |
Chelex 100 | Sigma Aldrich | C7901 | Remove contaminating paramagnetic compounds from buffer solutions |
Computer workstation | Linux or Mac OS compatable with NMR data processing and analysis software packages such as NMRPipe and Sparky | ||
Deuterium oxide | Sigma Aldrich | 151882 | Needed for NMR lock signal |
Dextrose | Sigma Aldrich | D9434 | M9 media component |
Dibasic Sodium Phosphate | Sigma Aldrich | S5136 | M9 media component |
Ellman's reagent (5,5-dithio-bis-(2-nitrobenzoic acid) | Thermo Fisher | 22582 | Quantification of free cystiene residues |
High speed centrifuge tubes | Thermo Fisher | 3114-0050 | Used to clear bacterial lysate. |
High-field NMR instrument (600 – 800 MHz) | Bruker | Equiped with a multichannel cryogenic probe and temperature control | |
IMAC column, HisTrap FF | Cytvia | 17528601 | Initial fractionation of crude bacterial lysate |
Isopropyl B-D-thiogalactoside (IPTG) | Sigma Aldrich | I6758 | Induces protein expression for genes under control of lac operator |
LB agar | Thermo Fisher | 22700025 | Items are used for transforming E. coli to express protein of interest, substitions for any of these items with like products is acceptable. |
LB broth | Thermo Fisher | 12780052 | |
Low-pressure chromatography system | Bio-Rad | 7318300 | BioRad BioLogic is used for low-pressure chomatograph such as running IMAC columns |
Magnesium sulfate | Sigma Aldrich | M7506 | M9 media component |
Medium pressure chromatography system | Bio-Rad | 7880007 | BioRad NGC equipped with a multi-wavelength detector, pH and conductivity monitors, and automatic fraction collector |
MEM vitamin solution | Sigma Aldrich | M6895 | M9 media component |
Microfluidizer | Avestin | EmulsiFlex-C3 | Provides rapid and efficient bacterial cell lysis |
Micropipettes | Thermo Fisher | Calibrated set of micropippetters with properly fitting disposable tips (available from multiple manufacturers e.g. Eppendorf) | |
Monobasic potassium phosphate | Sigma Aldrich | 1551139 | M9 media component |
NMR pipettes | Sigma Aldrich | 255688 | To remove sample from NMR tube |
NMR sample tube | NewEra | NE-SL5 | Suitable for high-field NMR spectrometers |
Preparative Centrifuge | Beckman Coulter | Avanti J-HC | Harvest E. coli cells after recombinant protein expression |
Round bottom polystyrene centrifuge tubes | Corning | 352057 | Clear bacterial lysate |
Shaking incubator | Eppendorf | S44I200005 | Temperature controlled growth of E. coli starter and expression cultures |
Sodium chloride | Sigma Aldrich | S5886 | M9 media component |
Sonicating water bath and vacuum source | Thomas Scientific | Used to degas buffer solutions | |
Sonicator | Thermo Fisher | FB505110 | Used for bacterial cell lysis or shearing bacterial DNA |
Spectrophotometer | Implen | OD600 Diluphotometer | Monitor growth of E.coli protein expression cultures |
Superdex 200 16/600 size exculsion colum | Cytvia | 28989333 | Final protein purification step |
Topspin software, version 3.2 or later | Bruker | Operating software for the NMR instrument | |
Transformation competent E. coli cells | Thermo Fisher | C600003 | One Shot BL21 Star (DE3) chemically competent E. coli, other strains may be compatable |
Tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine (TCEP) | ThermoFisher | 20490 | Reducing agent compatable with some sulfhydryl-reactive conjugations |
UV-Vis spectrophotometer | Implen | NP80 | Measure protein concentration. |
Water bath, temperature controlled | ThermoFisher | FSGPD25 | For heat shock step of bacterial transformation |
Yeast extract | Sigma Aldrich | Y1625 | For supplementing M9 media if required |