A high-throughput semi-automated preparation for filtered synaptoneurosomes

•New high-throughput, semi-automated homogenization and filtrations steps for synaptoneurosomes preparation.•Dramatically reduces time to prepare synaptoneurosomes.•Significantly increases sample recovery and enrichment for synaptic proteins.•The steps are compatible with biosafety regulations for p...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of neuroscience methods 2014-09, Vol.235, p.35-40
Hauptverfasser: Murphy, Kathryn M., Balsor, Justin, Beshara, Simon, Siu, Caitlin, Pinto, Joshua G.A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•New high-throughput, semi-automated homogenization and filtrations steps for synaptoneurosomes preparation.•Dramatically reduces time to prepare synaptoneurosomes.•Significantly increases sample recovery and enrichment for synaptic proteins.•The steps are compatible with biosafety regulations for pathogen infected brain tissue.•Important technical advance for studying synaptic proteins in valuable brain samples. Synaptoneurosomes have become an important tool for studying synaptic proteins. The filtered synaptoneurosomes preparation originally developed by Hollingsworth et al. (1985) is widely used and is an easy method to prepare synaptoneurosomes. The hand processing steps in that preparation, however, are labor intensive and have become a bottleneck for current proteomic studies using synaptoneurosomes. For this reason, we developed new steps for tissue homogenization and filtration that transform the preparation of synaptoneurosomes to a high-throughput, semi-automated process. We implemented a standardized protocol with easy to follow steps for homogenizing multiple samples simultaneously using a FastPrep tissue homogenizer (MP Biomedicals, LLC) and then filtering all of the samples in centrifugal filter units (EMD Millipore, Corp). The new steps dramatically reduce the time to prepare synaptoneurosomes from hours to minutes, increase sample recovery, and nearly double enrichment for synaptic proteins. These steps are also compatible with biosafety requirements for working with pathogen infected brain tissue. The new high-throughput semi-automated steps to prepare synaptoneurosomes are timely technical advances for studies of low abundance synaptic proteins in valuable tissue samples.
ISSN:0165-0270
1872-678X
DOI:10.1016/j.jneumeth.2014.05.036