4.4 Article

Extraction and Visualization of Protein Aggregates after Treatment of Escherichia coli with a Proteotoxic Stressor

Journal

JOVE-JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
Volume -, Issue 172, Pages -

Publisher

JOURNAL OF VISUALIZED EXPERIMENTS
DOI: 10.3791/62628

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Illinois State University School of Biological Sciences
  2. Illinois State University New Faculty Initiative Grant
  3. NIAID [R15AI164585]
  4. Illinois State University Undergraduate Research Support Program
  5. RISE fellowship by German Academic Exchange Service (DAAD)

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Exposure to environmental and cellular stresses can disrupt protein homeostasis, leading to protein aggregation in bacterial cells. This study presents an optimized method for extracting and visualizing aggregated and soluble proteins from different Escherichia coli strains.
The exposure of living organisms to environmental and cellular stresses often causes disruptions in protein homeostasis and can result in protein aggregation. The accumulation of protein aggregates in bacterial cells can lead to significant alterations in the cellular phenotypic behavior, including a reduction in growth rates, stress resistance, and virulence. Several experimental procedures exist for the examination of these stressor-mediated phenotypes. This paper describes an optimized assay for the extraction and visualization of aggregated and soluble proteins from different Escherichia coli strains after treatment with a silver-ruthenium-containing antimicrobial. This compound is known to generate reactive oxygen species and causes widespread protein aggregation. The method combines a centrifugation-based separation of protein aggregates and soluble proteins from treated and untreated cells with subsequent separation and visualization by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Coomassie staining. This approach is simple, fast, and allows a qualitative comparison of protein aggregate formation in different E. coli strains. The methodology has a wide range of applications, including the possibility to investigate the impact of other proteotoxic antimicrobials on in vivo protein aggregation in a wide range of bacteria. Moreover, the protocol can be used to identify genes that contribute to increased resistance to proteotoxic substances. Gel bands can be used for the subsequent identification of proteins that are particularly prone to aggregation.

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