Data from: A proteomic strategy for global analysis of plant protein complexes
Global analyses of protein complex assembly, composition, and location are needed to fully understand how cells coordinate diverse metabolic, mechanical, and developmental activities. The most common methods for proteome-wide analysis of protein complexes rely on affinity purification-mass spectrome...
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Zusammenfassung: | Global analyses of protein complex assembly, composition, and location are
needed to fully understand how cells coordinate diverse metabolic,
mechanical, and developmental activities. The most common methods for
proteome-wide analysis of protein complexes rely on affinity
purification-mass spectrometry or yeast two-hybrid approaches. These
methods are time consuming and are not suitable for many plant species
that are refractory to transformation or genome-wide cloning of open
reading frames. Here, we describe the proof of concept for a method
allowing simultaneous global analysis of endogenous protein complexes that
begins with intact leaves and combines chromatographic separation of
extracts from subcellular fractions with quantitative label-free protein
abundance profiling by liquid chromatography-coupled mass spectrometry.
Applying this approach to the crude cytosolic fraction of Arabidopsis
thaliana leaves using size exclusion chromatography, we identified
hundreds of cytosolic proteins that appeared to exist as components of
stable protein complexes. The reliability of the method was validated by
protein immunoblot analysis and comparisons with published size exclusion
chromatography data and the masses of known complexes. The method can be
implemented with appropriate instrumentation, is applicable to any
biological system, and has the potential to be further developed to
characterize the composition of protein complexes and measure the dynamics
of protein complex localization and assembly under different conditions. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.3r8p4 |