Based on the assembling mechanism of the INAD protein complex, in this protocol, a modified affinity purification plus competition strategy was developed to purify the endogenous Drosophila TRP channel.
Drosophila phototransduction is one of the fastest known G protein-coupled signaling pathways. To ensure the specificity and efficiency of this cascade, the calcium (Ca2+)-permeable cation channel, transient receptor potential (TRP), binds tightly to the scaffold protein, inactivation-no-after-potential D (INAD), and forms a large signaling protein complex with eye-specific protein kinase C (ePKC) and phospholipase Cβ/No receptor potential A (PLCβ/NORPA). However, the biochemical properties of the Drosophila TRP channel remain unclear. Based on the assembling mechanism of INAD protein complex, a modified affinity purification plus competition strategy was developed to purify the endogenous TRP channel. First, the purified histidine (His)-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment was bound to Ni-beads and used as bait to pull down the endogenous INAD protein complex from Drosophila head homogenates. Then, excessive purified glutathione S-transferase (GST)-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment was added to the Ni-beads to compete with the TRP channel. Finally, the TRP channel in the supernatant was separated from the excessive TRP 1261-1275 peptide by size-exclusion chromatography. This method makes it possible to study the gating mechanism of the Drosophila TRP channel from both biochemical and structural angles. The electrophysiology properties of purified Drosophila TRP channels can also be measured in the future.
Phototransduction is a process where absorbed photons are converted into electrical codes of neurons. It exclusively relays opsins and the following G protein-coupled signaling cascade in both vertebrates and invertebrates. In Drosophila, by using its five PDZ domains, scaffold protein inactivation-no-after-potential D (INAD) organizes a supramolecular signaling complex, which consists of a transient receptor potential (TRP) channel, phospholipase Cβ/No receptor potential A (PLCβ/NORPA), and eye-specific protein kinase C (ePKC)1. The formation of this supramolecular signaling complex guarantees the correct subcellular localization, high efficiency, and specificity of Drosophila phototransduction machinery. In this complex, light-sensitive TRP channels act as downstream effectors of NORPA and mediate calcium influx and the depolarization of photoreceptors. Previous studies showed that the opening of the Drosophila TRP channel is mediated by protons, disruption of the local lipid environment, or mechanical force2,3,4. The Drosophila TRP channel also interacts with calmodulin5 and is modulated by calcium by both positive and negative feedback6,7,8.
So far, electrophysiology studies on the gating mechanism of Drosophila TRP and TRP-like (TRPL) channels were based on excised membrane patches, whole-cell recordings from dissociated wild-type Drosophila photoreceptors, and hetero-expressed channels in S2, SF9, or HEK cells2,9,10,11,12,13, but not on purified channels. The structural information of the full-length Drosophila TRP channel also remains unclear. In order to study the electrophysiological properties of purified protein in a reconstituted membrane environment and to gain structural information of the full-length Drosophila TRP channel, obtaining purified full-length TRP channels is the necessary first step, similar to the methodologies used in mammalian TRP channel studies14,15,16,17.
Recently, based on the assembling mechanism of INAD protein complex18,19,20, an affinity purification plus competition strategy was first developed to purify the TRP channel from Drosophila head homogenates by streptavidin beads5. Considering the low capacity and expensive cost of streptavidin beads, an improved purification protocol is introduced here that uses His-tagged bait protein and corresponding low-cost Ni-beads with much higher capacity. The proposed method will help to study the gating mechanism of the TRP channel from structural angles and to measure the electrophysiological properties of the TRP channel with purified proteins.
1. Purification of GST-tagged TRP and His-tagged NORPA fragments
2. Preparation of Drosophila heads
3. Drosophila TRP channel purification
4. Size-exclusion column purification of Drosophila TRP channel
In this article, a protein purification method is demonstrated to purify endogenous Drosophila TRP channel (Figure 1).
First, recombinant protein expression and purification are applied to obtain the bait and competitor proteins. Then, a GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment is expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells in LB medium and purified using glutathione beads and a size-exclusion column (Figure 2). The samples were verified using SDS-PAGE analysis with Coomassie blue R250 staining. In the SDS-PAGE sample preparation process, 30 µL of protein sample is mixed with 10 µL of 4x loading dye and boiled at 100 °C for 10 min. Then, 15 µL of boiled sample is individually loaded into each well. The His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment is also similarly expressed in E. coli BL21 (DE3) cells in LB medium and purified by Ni-beads and size-exclusion column (Figure 3). The purified GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 and His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 are concentrated for the purification of the endogenous Drosophila TRP channel.
Second, Drosophila heads are collected and homogenized in liquid nitrogen using a pre-cooled mortar-pestle, and then dissolved in 10x v/w lysis buffer (Table 4). The dissolved head homogenate is incubated in a shaker at 4 °C for 20 min and centrifuged at 20,817 x g for 20 min at 4 °C. The spin-down supernatant (20817 g S, Figure 4A) is collected and further centrifuged at 100,000 x g for 60 min at 4 °C. The second spin-down supernatant (100,000 g S, Figure 4A) is used for the subsequent pull-down assay.
Finally, based on the principles of pull-down and competition assay, the affinity purification plus competition strategy is used to purify the endogenous TRP channel. The purified His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment is bound to Ni-beads and used as the bait to pull down the endogenous INAD protein complexes from Drosophila head homogenates. Then, excessive purified GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment is added to compete for the TRP channel from the captured INAD complexes on the Ni-beads (TRP E1, TRP E2, Figure 4B). In the end, the eluted TRP channel is separated from the excessive GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 peptide by size-exclusion chromatography (Figure 5). In the SDS-PAGE sample preparation process, 30 µL of protein sample is mixed with 10 µL of 4x loading dye and boiled at 100 °C for 10 min. Then, the 15 µL of sample is individually loaded into each well. As a byproduct, the INAD-ePKC-NORPA 863-1095 complexes can also be obtained by eluting the Ni-beads after TRP 1261-1275 peptide competition (NORPA E1, NORAP E2, Figure 4B). Using this method, the typical yield of the final purified Drosophila TRP channel from 0.5 g fly heads is 50 µL of 3 µM TRP protein (1.5 x 10-10 mol). If more purified TRP channels are needed, scale up the amount of fly heads, Ni-beads, bait protein, and competitor correspondingly.
Figure 1: The schematic diagram for purification of endogenous Drosophila TRP channel. (A) Purified His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 proteins are immobilized on the Ni-beads. (B) Drosophila heads are homogenized and the spin-down supernatant after 100,000 x g centrifugation is added to the NORPA-bound Ni-beads, where the NORPA 863-1095 protein acts as the bait to capture the endogenous INAD protein complexes (INAD/TRP/ePKC). (C) The GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment is added to compete for the endogenous Drosophila TRP channel from the captured INAD protein complexes. (D) The eluted TRP protein is further purified by a size-exclusion column to separate the excessive GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment. The red arrows highlight the elution positions of the TRP channel and GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment, respectively. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 2: Purification of GST-tagged TRP-CT 1261-1275 protein by glutathione beads and size-exclusion chromatography. (A) Purification profile of GST-tagged TRP-CT 1261-1275 protein in a size-exclusion column (preparation grade). The fractions are collected at 5 mL/tube. The fractions at the arrow position (tubes 44-48) are collected and concentrated for the following purification of the endogenous TRP channel. (B) Coomassie blue R250 stained SDS-PAGE gel showing the GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment in the Glutathione-beads affinity purification and subsequent size-exclusion column purification. The arrow highlights the position of the GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment in the SDS-PAGE gel. Abbreviations: P: pellet from E. coli. BL21 (DE3) cell lysate after homogenization in PBS buffer and centrifugation at 48,384 x g; S: supernatant from E. coli. BL21 (DE3) cell lysate after homogenization and centrifugation at 48,384 x g; F: flow-through fraction after previous S fraction incubated with glutathione beads for 30 min at 4 °C; W1 and W2: the first and second washing fraction by 10 column volumes of PBS buffer; B: Un-eluted protein on the resuspended glutathione beads is analyzed by SDS-PAGE gel to evaluate the elution efficiency; E: elution fraction from glutathione beads by elution buffer. The buffer recipe for the GST-tagged protein purification is described in Table 1. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 3: Purification of His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 protein by Ni-beads and size-exclusion chromatography. (A) Purification profile of His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 protein in a size-exclusion column. Flow rate = 3 mL/min. The fractions are collected at 5 mL/tube. The fractions at the arrow position (tubes 44-49) are collected and concentrated for the following purification of the endogenous TRP channel. (B) Coomassie blue R250 stained SDS-PAGE gel showing the His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 protein in Ni-column purification and subsequent size-exclusion column purification. The arrow highlights the position of His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 protein in the SDS-PAGE gel. Abbreviations: P: pellet from E. coli. BL21 (DE3) cell lysate after homogenization in binding buffer and centrifugation at 48,384 x g; S: supernatant fraction from E. coli. BL21 (DE3) cell lysate after homogenization and centrifugation at 48,384 x g; F: flow-through fraction after the previous S fraction is incubated with Ni-beads for 30 min at 4 °C; W1 and W2: the first and second washing fraction by 10 column volumes of wash buffer; B: Un-eluted protein on the resuspended Ni-beads after elution; E: elution fractions from Ni-beads by the elution buffer. The buffer recipe for the His-tagged protein purification is listed in Table 2. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 4: Purification of endogenous Drosophila TRP channel. The collected samples from every step are analyzed by SDS-PAGE and stained with Coomassie blue R-250 dye. (A) 20817 g S: supernatant fraction of head homogenates after 20,817 x g centrifugation; NORPA F: flow-through fraction of Ni-beads after His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment binding; Wash1 and Wash2: the first and second washing fractions of Ni-beads by lysis buffer after His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 binding; 100,000 g S: the previous 20,817 g S supernatant is further centrifuged at 100,000 x g and the supernatant is collected for SDS-PAGE; Dro head lysis F: flow-through fraction of Ni-beads after incubation with the 100,000 g S sample; Wash3 and Wash4: washing fractions of Ni-beads by lysis buffer after incubation with 100,000 g S sample. (B) TRP E1 and E2: the first and second eluted TRP channel fractions by GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment; Wash5: washing fractions of Ni-beads by binding buffer after competition by GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275; NORPA E1 and E2: the first and second elution fraction of His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragments with captured INAD/ePKC complexes; beads: un-eluted protein staying in the resuspended Ni-beads after elution buffer treatment. The buffer recipe for endogenous Drosophila TRP channel purification is described in Table 4. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Figure 5: Purification of endogenous Drosophila TRP channel protein by size-exclusion chromatography. (A) Purification profile of endogenous Drosophila TRP channel protein in size-exclusion column. Flow rate = 0.5 mL/min. The fractions were collected at 0.5 mL/tube. The fractions at the arrow position (1E8-1F2) were collected and concentrated. (B) Coomassie blue R-250 stained SDS-PAGE gel showing the endogenous Drosophila TRP channel protein after size-exclusion column purification. The position of purified endogenous Drosophila TRP channel protein is highlighted by the red arrow. Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.
Table 1: Materials needed for the purification of the GST-tagged TRP 1261-1275 fragment. Please click here to download this Table.
Table 2: Materials needed for the purification of the His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment. Please click here to download this Table.
Table 3: Materials needed for the preparation of Drosophila heads. Please click here to download this Table.
Table 4: Materials needed for the purification of Drosophila TRP channel. Please click here to download this Table.
Table 5: Materials needed for the size-exclusion column purification of the Drosophila TRP channel. Please click here to download this Table.
INAD, which contains five PDZ domains, is the core organizer of Drosophila phototransduction machinery. Previous studies showed that INAD PDZ3 binds to the TRP channel C-terminal tail with exquisite specificity (KD = 0.3 µM)18. INAD PDZ45 tandem interacts with NORPA 863-1095 fragment with an extremely high binding affinity (KD = 30 nM). These findings provide a solid biochemical basis to design the affinity purification plus competition strategy, which enables the NORPA CC-PBM fragment to be used as the pulldown bait, while the TRP C-terminal tail (fragment 1261-1275) functions as a competitive reagent. Therefore, the first critical point for this method is to understand the assembling mechanism of the INAD complex and obtain enough NORPA and TRP fragments. At the same time, since the TRP channel is the membrane protein that needs to be extracted from the membrane and stabilized in solution, the usage of detergent is the second critical point of this method. As a popular detergent for structural and functional studies of TRP channels24,25, n-Dodecyl-B-D-Maltoside (DDM) is used in this method. If the purification results are unsatisfactory, the qualities of the bait protein, competitor protein, and the detergent need to be checked carefully. In addition, the extraction efficiency of the TRP channels can be traced by western blot using the TRP antibody.
In a previous study5, expensive streptavidin beads were used to purify the TRP channel from fly head extracts, which limits routine purification in the lab. Therefore, the method was improved by using a His-tagged NORPA 863-1095 fragment coupled with Ni-beads to reduce cost and increase yield. Currently, the yields of the purified TRP channel in the improved method are sufficient to conduct a transmission electron microscope (TEM) negative staining experiment, in which the purified TRP channels form tetramers (data not shown), indicating the purification process does not disrupt the tetramer formation of TRP channels. Therefore, this protocol will be potentially suitable for future cryo-EM and electrophysiology experiments.
However, since the competitors used in the experiments (NORPA 863-1095 fragment, TRP 1261-1275 fragment) have similar binding affinities with wild-type proteins, the limitation of this method is that massive competitive proteins and beads must be used to pull down the target protein. It will be not convenient for labs that cannot purify the bait on a large scale.
A potential future application of this method will be to study the structural information of the Drosophila TRP channel using Cryo-EM techniques. In addition, measuring the electrophysiological properties of purified endogenous TRP channels in the artificial bilayer lipid membrane is also feasible. Moreover, in this reconstituted model system, it will be interesting to characterize the electrophysiological properties of purified endogenous TRP channels by modulating the INAD complex composition and lipid composition. Finally, combined with structural information and electrophysiological properties, the gating and regulation mechanisms of the TRP channel can be carefully examined in the future.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
This work was supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (No. 31870746), Shenzhen Basic Research Grants (JCYJ20200109140414636), and Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province, China (No. 2021A1515010796) to W. L. We thank LetPub (www.letpub.com) for its linguistic assistance during the preparation of this manuscript.
Bacterial strains | |||
BL21(DE3) Competent Cells | Novagen | 69450 | Protein overexpression |
Experiment models | |||
D.melanogaster: W1118 strain | Bloomington Drosophila Stock Center | BDSC:3605 | Drosophila head preparation |
Material | |||
20/30/40 mesh stainless steel sieves | Jiufeng metal mesh company | GB/T6003.1 | Drosophila head preparation |
30% Acrylamide-N,N′-Methylenebisacrylamide(29:1) | Lablead | A3291 | SDS-PAGE gel preparation |
Ammonium Persulfate | Invitrogen | HC2005 | SDS-PAGE gel preparation |
Cocktail protease inhibitor | Roche | 05892953001 | Protease inhibitor |
Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 | Sangon Biotech | A100472-0025 | SDS-PAGE gel staining |
DL-Dithiothreitol (DTT) | Sangon Biotech | A620058-0100 | Size-exclusion column buffer preparation |
Ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid disodium salt (EDTA) | Sangon Biotech | A500838-0500 | Size-exclusion column buffer preparation |
Glycine | Sangon Biotech | A610235-0005 | SDS-PAGE buffer preparation |
Glutathione Sepharose 4 Fast Flow beads | Cytiva | 17513202 | Affinity chromatography |
Imidazole | Sangon Biotech | A500529-0001 | Elution buffer preparation for Ni-column |
Isopropyl-beta-D-thiogalactopyranoside (IPTG) | Sangon Biotech | A600168-0025 | Induction of protein overexpression |
LB Broth Powder | Sangon Biotech | A507002-0250 | E.coli. cell culture |
L-Glutathione reduced (GSH) | Sigma-aldrich | G4251-100G | Elution buffer preparation for Glutathione beads |
Ni-Sepharose excel beads | Cytiva | 17371202 | Affinity chromatography |
N-Dodecyl beta-D-maltoside (DDM) | Sangon Biotech | A610424-001 | Detergent for protein purification |
N,N,N',N'-Tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED) | Sigma-aldrich | T9281-100ML | SDS-PAGE gel preparation |
PBS | Sangon Biotech | E607008-0500 | Homogenization buffer for E.coli. cell |
PMSF | Lablead | P0754-25G | Protease inhibitor |
Prestained protein marker | Thermo Scientific | 26619/26616 | Prestained protein ladder |
Size exclusion column (preparation grade) | Cytiva | 28989336 | HiLoad 26/60 Superdex 200 PG column |
Size exclusion column (analytical grade) | Cytiva | 29091596 | Superose 6 Increase 10/300 GL column |
Sodium chloride | Sangon Biotech | A501218-0001 | Protein purification buffer preparation |
Sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) | Sangon Biotech | A500228-0001 | SDS-PAGE gel/buffer preparation |
Tris base | Sigma-aldrich | T1503-10KG | Protein purification buffer preparation |
Ultrafiltration spin column | Millipore | UFC901096/801096 | Protein concentration |
Equipment | |||
Analytical Balance | DENVER | APX-60 | Metage of Drosophila head |
Desk-top high-speed refrigerated centrifuge for 15mL and 50mL conical centrifugation tubes | Eppendorf | 5810R | Protein concentration |
Desk-top high-speed refrigerated centrifuge 1.5mL centrifugation tubes | Eppendorf | 5417R | Centrifugation of Drosophila head lysate after homogenization |
Empty gravity flow column (Inner Diameter=1.0cm) | Bio-Rad | 738-0015 | TRP protein purification |
Empty gravity flow column (Inner Diameter=2.5cm) | Bio-Rad | 738-0017 | Bait and competitor protein purification from E.coli. |
Gel Documentation System | Bio-Rad | Universal Hood II Gel Doc XR System | SDS-PAGE imaging |
High-speed refrigerated centrifuge | Beckman coulter | Avanti J-26 XP | Centrifugation of E.coli. cells/cell lysate |
High pressure homogenizer | UNION-BIOTECH | UH-05 | Homogenization of E.coli. cells |
Liquid nitrogen tank | Taylor-Wharton | CX-100 | Drosophila head preparation |
Protein purification system | Cytiva | AKTA purifier | Protein purification |
Refrigerator (-80°C) | Thermo | 900GP | Drosophila head preparation |
Spectrophotometer | MAPADA | UV-1200 | OD600 measurement of E.coli. cells |
Spectrophotometer | Thermo Scientific | NanoDrop 2000c | Determination of protein concentration |
Ultracentrifuge | Beckman coulter | Optima XPN-100 Ultracentrifuge | Ultracentrifugation |