4.8 Article

A split green fluorescent protein system to enhance spatial and temporal sensitivity of translating ribosome affinity purification

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PLANT JOURNAL
卷 111, 期 1, 页码 304-315

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tpj.15779

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translation; ribosome; Arabidopsis; Hyaloperonospora arabidopsidis; technical advance

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Translating ribosome affinity purification (TRAP) is a method that uses transgenic plants to purify ribosomes and translating mRNAs. It can be used for studying actively translated mRNAs by quantitative PCR or RNA sequencing. This approach allows researchers to isolate the translatome of specific cell types using condition- or cell-specific promoters. However, it may lack sensitivity in cases where the condition/cell-specific promoter is weak, ribosome turnover is low, or the targeted cells are short-lived. To overcome these limitations, a new TRAP system was developed that utilizes two transgenes and provides increased sensitivity and better temporal resolution.
Translating ribosome affinity purification (TRAP) utilizes transgenic plants expressing a ribosomal protein fused to a tag for affinity co-purification of ribosomes and the mRNAs that they are translating. This population of actively translated mRNAs (translatome) can be interrogated by quantitative PCR or RNA sequencing. Condition- or cell-specific promoters can be utilized to isolate the translatome of specific cell types, at different growth stages and/or in response to environmental variables. While advantageous for revealing differential expression, this approach may not provide sufficient sensitivity when activity of the condition/cell-specific promoter is weak, when ribosome turnover is low in the cells of interest, or when the targeted cells are ephemeral. In these situations, expressing tagged ribosomes under the control of these specific promoters may not yield sufficient polysomes for downstream analysis. Here, we describe a new TRAP system that employs two transgenes: One is constitutively expressed and encodes a ribosomal protein fused to one fragment of a split green fluorescent protein (GFP); the second is controlled by a stimulus-specific promoter and encodes the second GFP fragment fused to an affinity purification tag. In cells where both transgenes are active, the purification tag is attached to ribosomes by bi-molecular folding and assembly of the split GFP fragments. This approach provides increased sensitivity and better temporal resolution because it labels pre-existing ribosomes and does not depend on rapid ribosome turnover. We describe the optimization and key parameters of this system, and then apply it to a plant-pathogen interaction in which spatial and temporal resolution are difficult to achieve with current technologies.

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