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Proteome networks are a crucial facet of biological systems that mediate cellular functions and responses to the environment. However, a main limitation of traditional approaches to study protein interactions, such as yeast-2-hybrid and affinity purification-coupled with mass spectrometry (AP-MS), is their restricted ability to identify interactions for membrane-bound and/or insoluble protein complexes. These types of interactions include many of the protein complexes that mediate the perception and response to cellular stimuli and are therefore of great research interest. Proximity-dependent biotinylation (PDB) coupled to mass spectrometry provides a powerful approach to survey proximal protein interactions in living cells, including membrane bound and insoluble complexes. One PDB method, BioID, translationally fuses a promiscuous biotin ligase to a bait protein of interest, allowing covalent biotinylation of proximal proteins (within ~10 nm). Modified proteins can be purified from cells without the need to maintain protein interactions, and subsequently identified by mass spectrometry. Although BioID has revolutionized the study of proteomes in numerous organisms, its application to plant systems has only recently been realized. In this chapter, we outline a protocol for BioID in tissues of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana.

Citation

Madiha Khan, Rajagopal Subramaniam, Darrell Desveaux. Biotin-Based Proximity Labeling of Protein Complexes in Planta. Methods in molecular biology (Clifton, N.J.). 2021;2200:425-440

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PMID: 33175391

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