|
|
|||||||
ARTICLES |
Department of Biology, Swarthmore College, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 19081
Submitted August 5, 2002; Revised September 30, 2002; Accepted October 3, 2002
| ABSTRACT |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Key Words: phenotypic analysis fusion protein mutants
| INTRODUCTION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This laboratory exercise furthers student understanding of the utility of genetics, protein fusion technology, and microbes in cell biology by providing firsthand experience with the effects of mutations that alter protein localization. The budding yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiae is a eukaryote and therefore contains the same basic structures, such as nuclei, mitochondria, endoplasmic reticulum (ER), and peroxisomes, that are found in more complex organisms. Many organelle components and the pathways used to localize molecules to organelles have been identified and partially characterized in S. cerevisiae, and studies in yeast continue to be groundbreaking in many fields. Frequently, findings in yeast pertaining to basic cell biological processes can be generalized to other eukaryotic cells. Because S. cerevisiae is unicellular and stable as a haploid or a diploid, isolation and characterization of recessive mutations is relatively straightforward, which facilitates genetic analysis. Because of the ease of genetic manipulation, the small genome size, the short doubling time, and the inexpensive growth conditions, S. cerevisiae has been called the Escherichia coli of eukaryotic cells (Watson et al., 1987). These characteristics make budding yeast an excellent and frequently used model system for research laboratories as well as an ideal system for a teaching laboratory.
The proper localization of proteins to specific subcellular structures is critical for cell growth and especially important in the functioning of eukaryotic cells with their many membrane-bound compartments. In eukaryotic organisms, proteins destined to be secreted have signal sequences at their amino terminus. In most cases, the signal sequence interacts with cellular factors that stop translation and target the nascent polypeptide chain to the ER. Once brought to the ER membrane, the new protein is usually cotranslationally translocated into the ER. The Sec61 protein is the primary component of the translocation channel (see Romisch, 1999, and Robb and Brown, 2001, for recent reviews). SEC61 was originally identified by directly selecting for mutants that failed to localize a protein containing a signal sequence to the secretory pathway (Deshaies and Schekman, 1987). A similar screen was used to isolate mutants in E. coli that affected protein translocation through the inner membrane (Oliver and Beckwith, 1981).
In the study that led to the isolation of SEC61, Deshaies and
Schekman (1987) fused DNA
encoding a signal sequence from the secreted
-factor protein to DNA
encoding histidinol dehydrogenase (pRSB204;
Figure 1A). Alpha-factor is a
mating pheromone normally secreted by
cells to attract cells of the
opposite mating type (a cells). Histidinol dehydrogenase, encoded by
the HIS4 gene, is required for the last step in histidine
biosynthesis. The substrate of the enzyme, histidinol, is present only in the
cytoplasm, and the product of the reaction, histidine, is required in the
cytoplasm for the charging of tRNAHis molecules required for
protein synthesis. The ER membrane is impermeable to histidinol and histidine.
Therefore, haploid yeast with a mutation in their chromosomal copy of
HIS4 and that contain the
-factorHis4 fusion protein
are phenotypically His- because the fusion protein is localized to
the secretory pathway and therefore no histidine is produced. In contrast,
yeast compromised for the ability to translocate proteins into the secretory
pathway are His+ if they carry the
-factorHis4 fusion
protein even if they have a mutation in their chromosomal copy of
HIS4. In this case, sufficient fusion protein accumulates in the
cytoplasm to allow histidine production. Selection of yeast mutants that could
grow on media lacking histidine when they contained the
-factorHis4 fusion protein allowed the identification of genes
encoding protein products involved in the translocation of proteins into the
ER membrane (Deshaies and Schekman,
1987). This approach to identifying proteins required for
translocation is summarized in Alberts et al.
(2002, p. 668). Yeast that have
a mutation in their chromosomal copy of HIS4 and have defects in
other parts of the secretory pathway are His- when carrying the
-factorHis4 fusion protein because although they do not secrete
the fusion protein as the wild type does, the protein accumulates within
secretory organelles or vesicles and is therefore unable to function.
|
-factor signal sequence
(Figure 1B). Strains carrying
this plasmid can grow on media without histidine; thus, these transformants
serve as a positive control to demonstrate that cells that can produce their
own histidine can grow on appropriate media. Finally, a negative control
plasmid, YEp24 (Figure 1C),
containing neither
-factor nor HIS4 sequences, is used to
demonstrate that all strains are phenotypically His- if they are
not transformed with a plasmid containing the HIS4 gene. YEp24 is the
vector backbone on which the other constructs are based.
Using the plasmids constructed by Deshaies and Schekman
(1987), this laboratory
exercise allows analysis of the effects of a mutation that blocks
translocation of proteins into the ER (sec61-1) and a mutation that
blocks later in the secretory pathway (sec18-1; an allele of yeast
NSF). This exercise also permits comparison of the effects of these alleles
with those of wild-type strains containing no mutations in the secretory
pathway. All strains are haploid and have mutations in ura3, which
allows selection for yeast cells transformed with the plasmids and
his4; which allows investigation into the localization of the fusion
protein. The effects of blocking secretion are analyzed by indirectly assaying
the localization of the
-factorHis4 fusion protein and on cell
viability.
Yeast strains that are completely defective for the import of proteins into the ER and secretory pathway are inviable because proteins localized to the plasma membrane are critical for a number of cellular functions, including the import of nutrients and the development of a new daughter cell. Thus, the mutants used in this experiment are conditional, growing under some conditions but not others. The isolation and characterization of conditional mutants is necessary for genes that affect essential processes in haploid organisms. Most likely, the mutations result in amino acid changes that affect the amount of protein that is folded properly. At low temperatures, enough of the protein is functional so that yeast cells can grow, whereas at high temperatures, when more thermal energy is in the system, more protein is nonfunctional. Discussion of the kinds of amino acid changes that could result in a protein that was functional at some temperatures and not at other temperatures allows the instructor to revisit the forces and interactions that stabilize the secondary, tertiary, and quaternary structures of proteins that were probably discussed earlier in the cell biology course.
| MATERIALS AND METHODS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
SEC+ ura3 his4 leu2 trp1 HOL1-1; LY
689 MAT
sec18-1 ura3 his4 HOL1-1; LY 651 MAT
sec61-1 ura3 leu2 trp1 his4 HOL1-1. These strains likely have other
auxotrophies not listed here.
Plasmid DNA (Available upon Request)
YEp24 vector; pRSB203-YEp24 with HIS4; pRSB204-YEp24 with
HIS4 fused to the
-factor signal sequence
(Figure 1).
The Laboratory Schedule
In practice, we have always executed the entire protocol as part of a
4-week module that uses approximately an entire 3-h lab period each week, with
time for discussion, as described subsequently. All student handouts for this
4-week module can be found in the Appendixes. However, a more minimal exercise
of simply spotting yeast strains provided by the instructor during week 1 and
analyzing them during week 2 would be feasible. In this case, ample time would
be available for discussion, or another experiment could easily be executed
during the same laboratory period.
Depending on the level of the students, the laboratory can be made more or less investigative and challenging. Usually, when executed as a 4-week module, neither the identity of the three plasmids nor the identity of the secretion-defective strains is revealed to the students. Instead, the plasmids are simply labeled A, B, and C, and the students use restriction analysis and Southern blotting to determine the identity of each plasmid in parallel with the yeast transformation and phenotypic analysis. Some years, students have been told that the plasmid labels were lost from the samples during shipping. When students are not given any explanation, they seem to easily accept that identifying the plasmids is part of the laboratory exercise. After identification of the plasmids, the students use the phenotypic analysis of yeast transformants to draw conclusions about the presence or absence of a specific type of secretion defect in the yeast strains analyzed. Such analysis makes the exercise much more interesting for the students and requires integration of a number of pieces of data.
When this exercise is performed as a 4-week experiment, students purify plasmid DNA from E. coli strains containing YEp24, pRSB203, and pRSB204 during the first week (Appendix A; see also the next subsections). Each team of students (usually two to four people) isolates the three plasmids. The second week, student teams use restriction enzymes to digest their DNA that was isolated the previous week. Usually, students digest their DNA with three enzymes for a total of nine digests per team. During incubation of the DNA with restriction enzymes, students transform their three plasmids into a single yeast strain with appropriate controls (Appendix B). Agarose gel electrophoresis, analysis of restriction enzyme digests, transfer of DNA to nylon membranes (Southern blotting), and spotting of yeast transformants are performed during the third week (Appendix C). During final week, students probe and analyze their Southern blots and examine the growth of their yeast cells (Appendix D). Ample time for discussion of results also is available during this period.
Miniprep and Restriction Analysis The instructor inoculates cultures of E. coli into sterile LB media supplemented with 50 µg/ml ampicillin the day before the laboratory. Students isolate the DNA by using a standard "miniprep" procedure (e.g., Ausubel et al., 1987; Sambrook et al., 1989) during the first week of the module (Appendix A) and then use their isolated DNA for yeast transformations the following week (Appendix B). If students are to determine the identity of the plasmids, as described previously, during the second week they also digest their DNA with restriction enzymes to aid in the identification of each plasmid (Appendix B). HindIII, EcoRI, and PstI have been used successfully for this purpose. A restriction map of YEp24 is available (Figure 1C; see also New England Biolabs Catalog and Technical Reference, 2002), as is the complete sequence of the plasmid (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/htbin-post/Entrez/query?uid=310855&form=6&db=n&Dopt=g). The construction of plasmids pRSB203 and pRSB204 was complex (Deshaies and Schekman, 1987, and references therein); maps constructed from the available data are shown in Figures 1A and 1B. We have been unable to fully reconcile the description of the plasmids with our experimental data. Because part of the exercise for my students is the identification of specific differences between the maps and their data, I do not describe these differences in this article but do include them with the plasmids sent to instructors.
Southern Blotting
To help in the identification of the plasmids, students can perform a
Southern blot. In general, identifying the vector, YEp24, is straightforward,
even from a single restriction digest. Distinguishing pRSB203 and pRSB204 is
more difficult because they differ only slightly in size and restriction
sites, and the plasmid maps constructed have some inaccuracies, as mentioned
in the preceding paragraph. A Southern blot using a probe from the
-factor gene unequivocally shows that pRSB204 contains the signal
sequence encoded from the
-factor gene and allows students to determine
which restriction fragments contain sequences from the
-factor coding
sequence. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers for the
-factor gene
are available from Research Genetics/Invitrogen
(http://www.resgen.com/products/YGP.php3).
Genomic DNA suitable for use as a PCR template can easily be isolated
(Ausubel et al., 1995;
Adams et al., 1998;
Akadaet al., 2000;
Burke et al., 2000) or
purchased (Research Genetics/Invitrogen,
http://www.resgen.com/products/YGP.php3),
and the
-factor gene can be amplified by the instructor or by the
students from a wild-type yeast strain using standard conditions
(ftp://ftp.resgen.com/pub/genepairs/yeast_genpairs/yeast_gp_PCRprotocol.txt;
Ausubel et al., 1995).
We successfully labeled the PCR product by using the enhanced
chemiluminescence (ECL)direct kit (Amersham Biosciences, Piscataway,
NJ); other nonradioactive labeling procedures could also be used.
An "upside-down" Southern blotting with a 45-min transfer, originally suggested by F. Volkert, State University of New York (SUNY) Downstate Medical Center, (Appendix C) is used to transfer the DNA onto a nylon membrane such as Hybond-N+ (Amersham Biosciences). This methods allows students to complete running and photographic documentation of gels and transfer of the DNA onto the membrane in the same 3-h laboratory period. Membranes can be stored between sheets of Whatman paper at 4°C for at least a week.
Spotting Yeast on Plates Complete instructions for media preparation were recently published in this journal (Odom and Grossel, 2002) and are available from a number of other sources (see subsequent discussion). Specifically, the amino acid dropout mix is made as described and can be stored in the dark for a number of years after it is mixed very well. The nutrient solutions are also made as described. Glucose (100 ml of 20%/l of media) is autoclaved in a container separate from other media components and added afterward. Synthetic complete media lacking uracil (subsequently called SC-U) and synthetic complete media lacking uracil and histidine with histidinol (subsequently called SC-H-U) are made similarly to the SC-T (synthetic complete media lacking tryptophan) described. In both cases, sterile tryptophan is added after autoclaving. To make SC-U plates, the uracil supplement is omitted. To make SC-H-U plates, the uracil and histidine supplements are both omitted and histidinol is added to a final concentration of 3 mM (Sigma Chemical Co., St. Louis, MQ). We successfully added the histidinol powder to the media after autoclaving without adversely affecting the sterility of the media. Alternatively, a 300 mM solution of histidinol in water can be filter sterilized and 10 ml added to a liter of media after autoclaving.
Instructions to make "dropout" media (sometimes called "complete minimal dropout media") can also be found in a number of laboratory manuals (Ausubel et al., 1995; Adams et al., 1998; Burke et al., 2000) and online (http://genome-www.stanford.edu/Saccharomyces/VL-yeast.html). In addition, premixed powders containing the amino acid dropout mix with or without yeast nitrogen base as well as prepoured plates are available for purchase (Qbiogene, Inc. [formerly Bio101, Inc.], Carlsbad, CA, http://www.qbiogene.com/; Teknova, Inc., Half Moon Bay, CA, http://www.teknova.com/). If prepoured plates are purchased, spreading histidinol on the plates lacking histidine and uracil a few days before laboratory would probably be acceptable. Each plate should be assumed to contain approximately 25 ml of media; histidinol should be diluted so that not less than 0.2 ml is spread per plate to ensure even distribution.
Yeast cells competent for transformation are provided by the instructor. These can be prepared by various methods (Ausubel et al., 1995; Adams et al., 1998; Burke et al., 2000; Odom and Grossel, 2002; http://www.umanitoba.ca/faculties/medicine/biochem/gietz/Quick.html). In addition, kits are available containing all the solutions and reagents necessary for the transformation (Genomics One International, [previously Tetralink], Buffalo, NY, Gietz lab yeast transformation kit at http://www.tetra-link.com/; Qbiogene at http://www.qbiogene.com/products/gene-expression/ez-yeast.shtml; BD Biosciences/Clontech Palo Alto, CA, at http://www.clontech.com/products/catalog02/HTML/1020.shtml). Yeast cells are made competent (by treatment with 0.1 M lithium acetate; 10 mM Tris-HCl; pH 7.5; 1 mM EDTA [ethylene-dinitrilo tetraacetic acid]) the day before the first laboratory period of the week and have been successfully stored at 4°C for at least 3 d. Because the number of transformants is not critical, the slight decrease in transformation efficiency that may occur upon storage is not a problem. Furthermore, saturated cultures of yeast cells or cells scraped from plates have been used instead of log phase cultures without problem. Sheared carrier DNA for the transformation is available commercially (Research Genetics/Invitrogen; BD Biosciences/Clontech).
Each student team transforms one strain of yeast with the three plasmids isolated in the first week. Students are encouraged to perform control transformations. The three strainsSEC+, sec18, and sec61are usually transformed by members of a single laboratory class such that each student team has access to all strains transformed with all plasmids the following week. Students are encouraged to label their plates carefully and completely on the bottom so that if the instructor needs transformants from a particular strain, they are easily accessible. The following week, the yeast transformants are spotted on two types of media. The first, SC-H-U, lacks uracil and histidine and contains 3 mM histidinol, and the second, SC-U, lacks only uracil. Only cells that can make their own uracil and histidine can grow on the first set of media. In addition, the ability of the yeast cells to grow at three temperatures (25°C, 30°C, and 38°C) is analyzed. If incubators are limiting, yeast cells can be assayed at room temperature and 38°C. Each team of students works with transformants from three yeast strainswild type, sec61, and sec18 mutant yeast. Each transformant (or a few transformants if they are less than 1 mm in diameter) to be analyzed is resuspended in 100 µl of sterile water in a microfuge tube. Students are encouraged to do duplicate or triplicate samples for each strain and plasmid combination. Cell suspensions are vortexed, and 5 µl of each are aliquoted and gridded onto six plates (SC-H-U and SC-U at three temperatures each). Plates are incubated for 3 to 7 d and are analyzed in lab the following week. Spotting cells in this manner allows more-reproducible results and analysis of more colonies per plate than streaking does.
Phenotypic Analysis of Yeast Students are encouraged to devise a scoring system for cell growth on plates that fairly reflects the phenotypes they see. Three to four categories (i.e., + +, +, + / -, -) usually suffice. Analysis of the controls is necessary before students begin to interpret the experiment. Students can often see a film of cells even on plates on which they expect no growth (e.g., wild-type cells containing the YEp24 plasmid on the SC-H-U plates). This cell film occurs because so many cells were placed on the plate. This amount of growth is scored as (-) because it represents the background. Similarly, the amount of growth seen with the wild-type strain and pRSB203 (the HIS4 construct without the signal sequence) represents the maximum growth (+ +) that they can expect on the SC-H-U plates. Students frequently need help thinking about how to interpret the controls.
| RESULTS |
|---|
|
|
|---|
-factor gene, only
specific bands from plasmid pRSB204 hybridize to the probe. With this
information, all students can then unambiguously differentiate plasmids
pRSB203 and pRSB204.
Yeast Transformation and Phenotypic Analysis
Students are encouraged to include positive and negative controls for their
yeast transformation. Most students determine that a sample for which no
plasmid DNA is added to the transformation is a good control to show that the
untransformed strain is unable to grow on media lacking uracil. In addition,
some students want to use as a positive control a plasmid that was previously
used successfully in a transformation. Other students suggest that spreading
the cells on plates that have uracil added to them is another good control.
Doing so demonstrates that the only reason the cells are not growing on the
plates is their inability to make uracil. A stock of sterile 20 mM uracil is
made available to students for this use, and students spread 0.2 ml on the
plate before spreading cells.
Most students obtain transformants with their plasmids, although, sometimes students see no colonies appear or their plates are too contaminated to use. The negative and positive controls generally behave as expected: no colonies grow in the absence of added DNA, and colonies grow if uracil is added to the plates or if a control plasmid is utilized for the transformation. If some groups fail to obtain transformants, they may be able to borrow some from another laboratory period or group for their analysis. In addition, stocks of each strain transformed with the three plasmids have been archived and are available to instructors who request them. These can be stored as a stable stock at 80°C in case of difficulty recovering transformants, or for use by instructors who do not want to do the full 4-week module, as mentioned previously.
Students use their own transformants as well as those from at least two other groups to spot SC-U and SC-H-U plates at 25°C, 30°C, and 38°C. The SC-U plates contain all the nutrients that the transformed cells need to grow. As a result, after the transformants are spotted, all isolates from the wild-type strain grow on SC-U at all three temperatures, whereas the transformants from the sec61 and sec18 strains grow well at 25°C and 30°C and show little growth at 38°C. Because secretion is an essential process, cells containing mutations that produce temperature-sensitive proteins are inviable at high temperatures even if they have all their required nutrients. The sec61 mutant yeast frequently show some "leaky" growth at 38°C. The instructor can use this example as an opportunity to discuss the difficulties of isolating mutants that are strongly defective under some conditions but much less defective under others.
The SC-H-U plates are lacking histidine; thus, cells from all strains transformed with the YEp24 vector control plasmid fail to grow on these plates at any temperature. These cells are lacking histidinol dehydrogenase activity and thus require histidine to grow. These controls demonstrate the phenotype of strains that are His- and act as a negative control for growth on SC-H-U plates. Students will likely see a film of cells at the positions where the YEp24-containing strains were spotted. Cells have intracellular stores of amino acids and may be able to go through a few doublings before growth is arrested.
In contrast to the strains transformed with YEp24, strains transformed with the positive control pRSB203 plasmid, which contains the HIS4 gene, are able to grow on the SC-H-U media. Strains containing this plasmid act as a positive control for growth on SC-H-U plates. The wild-type strain transformed with pRSB203 grows well at all temperatures on the SC-H-U media, whereas the growth of the secretion-defective mutants on SC-H-U resembles that on SC-U: the cells grow well at 23°C and 30°C and fail to grow at 38°C. The pRSB203-containing strains demonstrate that the only nutrient lacking on these plates is histidine and that cells that can manufacture their own histidine can grow, unless they have another mutation that causes temperature sensitivity.
The pRSB204 plasmid encodes a fusion protein that consists of the signal
sequence from the secreted
-factor pheromone fused in frame to
HIS4. Thus, the resultant protein is targeted to the ER and secretory
pathway. The wild-type strain containing pRSB204 is phenotypically
His- and unable to grow on the SC-H-U plates at any temperature. In
contrast, the sec61 strain with pRSB204 grows on the SC-H-U plates at
23°C and 30°C. Because sec61 mutants have a defect in the
translocation of proteins into the ER, sufficient quantities of the fusion
protein accumulate in the cytoplasm, where they function to produce histidine.
Because the cells are growing on the SC-H-U plates, it is clear that they can
synthesize histidine and therefore mislocalize the
-factorHIS4 fusion protein. However, because secretion
is an essential process, failure to import any proteins into the ER will
result in cell death. Thus, at 23°C and 30°C, enough proteins are
being translocated to allow cell viability; however, there is also some defect
in translocation that allows the accumulation of sufficient cytoplasmic His4
protein to allow synthesis of adequate levels of histidine.
The sec18 strain containing pRSB204 behaves like the wild type and
fails to grow on the SC-H-U plates at any temperature. The sec18
mutant causes the accumulation of vesicles because vesicle fusion with target
membranes is disrupted (Wilson et
al., 1989; Kaiser and
Schekman, 1990). Thus, the
-factorHIS4 fusion
protein enters the secretory pathway and most likely accumulates in vesicles
where it is unable to function. The utilization of this strain in the assay
illustrates that not all secretion-defective mutants behave similarly and
allows student investigators to discriminate between mutants that affect the
translocation of proteins into the ER and those that block later in the
pathway.
Students who use the literature to determine the function of sec18 and sec61 before coming to laboratory can frequently predict the phenotype of the sec18 and sec61 transformants carrying pRSB204. For others, the observation that not all sec mutants behave similarly challenges them to think more carefully about the secretory pathway and the fusion protein. The fusion protein was used to specifically select for mutants that failed to translocate the protein into the ER (Deshaies and Schekman, 1987) because other screens and selections for secretion-defective yeast failed to identify mutations in this class (Novick and Schekman, 1979; Novick et al., 1980; Ferro-Novick et al., 1984). Students can be encouraged to propose selections that would allow the isolation of mutants defective in other stages of secretion.
| DISCUSSION |
|---|
|
|
|---|
For the past 3 yr, on the day when they will score the growth of their yeast colonies, students are required to come to laboratory with a chart prepared containing their predictions as to which strains will grow under particular conditions of media, temperature, and plasmid (Appendix D). This goal-oriented task greatly aids both the student in understanding the material and the instructor in understanding where the student needs help and which students are confused. Many students struggle to have a hypothesis about the growth of each transformed strain on each type of media; approximately one-third of the students come to laboratory with correct predictions for all the strains and all conditions. Student groups must take part in a discussion with the instructor before receiving their plates for analysis. During this time, the instructor can work with students to review what they have been doing and to help clarify expectations and hypotheses. The exercise requires them to synthesize a number of ideas, as well as work that they have performed during a number of weeks. However, by the end of the last laboratory period, at least 90% of the students understand the phenotypic analysis and generally seem to feel a great sense of accomplishment at having mastered the module. A number of students have noted how satisfying it is when all the "information comes together." There is palpable excitement in the laboratory when students begin to examine their plates, with many "ah-ha!"s and "ohhhs!"s exclaimed during the analysis.
In anonymous course evaluations, students have generally thought that the technical difficulty of all the laboratory modules was appropriate. Specifically, when students were asked to rank the difficulty of each exercise, where 1 is too easy and 5 is too difficult, the miniprep/restriction digestion scored 3.0 ± 0.6, the yeast transformation scored 3.1 ± 0.4, the yeast phenotypic analysis scored 3.1 ± 0.5, and the Southern blotting scored 3.0 ± 0.4 (Table 1).
|
Students were also asked to rank the interestingness of the laboratory exercises on a scale of 1 (not interesting) to 5 (very interesting). The miniprep/restriction analysis segment scored 3.9 ± 0.9, the yeast transformation scored 4.3 ± 0.8, the phenotypic analysis scored 4.4 ± 0.7, and the Southern blotting scored 4.2 ± 0.8. These data on interest and content value and technical difficulty are based on the responses of approximately 90 students for the restriction analysis, transformation, and phenotypic analysis, and approximately 50 students for the Southern blotting, with an evaluation form return rate of at least 80% annually (Table 1). These evaluations include those returned the first time the exercise was used in the laboratory.
Comments on the evaluations suggest that students were excited to execute and understand many of the techniques, especially Southern blotting, about which they had read in texts and papers, and a number of students returned later to tell me that the experience helped them during summer internships and as research assistants. When asked for the most interesting or important thing that was learned from the secretion laboratory experiments, students responded as follows: "I really started to understand ER import in lab. It was great to realize I could figure out what each sec mutant was." "I think this lab really helped in understanding the sec pathway and the techniques people use to find things out in cell bio." "It was interesting to learn how the experiments could be integrated to find out various things concerning the plasmids and the secretory pathway." On a final exam taken approximately 1.5 months after the completion of the experiment, 50% of the students in the course answered the following questions completely correctly, and another 25% earned at least 80% of the points:
These scores demonstrate that the majority of students understand how signal sequences function to direct proteins to the secretory pathway and the role of the Sec61 protein in this process after the laboratory exercise is completed.
During 5 of the 6 yr that this experiment was executed, students wrote laboratory reports containing at least one reference from the primary literature. Instead of writing a laboratory report, students who enrolled in the class during the most recent year were examined orally for 20 min on their understanding of the material. In all cases, students were required to explain the differences between the three plasmids used in the experiment and the role of each plasmid in the experiment. In an oral exam 1 week after completion of the laboratory exercises, all students could describe how the plasmids differed from one another and why this was important. They all could also describe why strains with severe defects in the secretory pathway were inviable. Students were also required to address the differences in growth between the sec61 and sec18 strains of yeast on the different types of media and at different temperatures. Approximately 85% could clearly describe how they determined the identity of the three yeast strains on the basis of their growth with the various plasmids at different temperatures and on different media. Almost 70% of the students could clearly and explicitly describe how a mutation in sec61 or sec18 could make yeast strains carrying the allele inviable at high temperatures. Other specific suggestions for issues that students were required to address in their papers or orally can be found in Appendixes E and F.
The Saccharomyces Genome Database (SGD; http://genome-www.stanford.edu/Saccharomyces/) was suggested to students as an excellent resource for preparation for laboratory or written or oral evaluations. Using this database is a valuable way for students to familiarize themselves with the wealth of information freely available to investigators over the World Wide Web. The SEC61 and SEC18 pages are easy to find, are kept current, and contain a variety of material. An instructor could use this database as a starting point for a number of other exercises. The Sec61 protein has been shown to be the primary component of the translocation channel in both yeast and mammals, and a large number of recent references in readily available journals can be found. Sec18 is an ATPase critically important for vesicle trafficking at a number of steps in the secretory pathway and, again, a number of recent papers can be found in accessible journals. Sec61 protein and Sec18 protein are conserved among all eukaryotes and could be an excellent starting point for a bioinformatics module in which students identify homologues from different organisms, perform alignments, and predict the localization of proteins by using available online resources. Furthermore, because Sec61 and Sec18 are conserved, they are excellent examples of the good reason to study model organisms, and they can help students think about the evolution of proteins and organisms.
| APPENDIX A Secretion Lab I: Minipreps (Plasmid Isolation from E. coli) |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Over the next few weeks we will examine secretion in the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae. S. cerevisiae is a unicellular eukaryote that is stable as either a haploid or a diploid, which greatly facilitates genetic analysis. Because of the ease of genetic manipulation, small genome size, and economic growth conditions, it has been called the E. coliof eukaryotic cells. As a eukaryote, S. cerevisiae contains the same basic structures found in more complex organisms, such as nuclei, mitochondria, ER, and peroxisomes. If one is interested in studying basic cellular processes like secretion or mitosis, one can stick with a cheaper and simpler system that is easy to manipulate (relatively speaking). This commonsense argument has proved quite fruitful. The components and mechanisms of many systems have been first identified and characterized in yeast, and studies in yeast are continuing to be ground-breaking in many fields. Further analysis in "bigger" eukaryotes has demonstrated high conservation of mechanismin many cases, human genes or proteins can even substitute for their yeast homologues functionally, and vice versa.
We will be working with wild-type and a few secretion-defective (sec) yeast strains. A complete blockage in secretion is lethal to the cell because the cell needs to secrete proteins in order to make a bud and divide, and to insert proteins into its membrane required for the uptake of nutrients. Therefore, the secretion defects in the mutant strains are not complete loss of function. At room temperature (25°C), cells with the mutation grow reasonably well; at 30°C, their growth may be slightly compromised; and at 38°C, they are almost completely inviable. Mutants with this type of phenotype are "conditional" or "temperature sensitive." Different sec mutants block secretion at different steps along the secretory pathway (i.e., import into the ER, transit from the ER to the Golgi, trafficking within the Golgi compartments, etc.). On the basis of the analysis and experiments that we perform in lab, you will be able to hypothesize what step is blocked in the secretion-defective mutants we analyze.
MINIPREP PLASMID ISOLATION
Our study requires the transformation of plasmids into the wild-type and
sec mutant yeast, followed by analysis of the phenotypes of the
transformed yeast cells. We will discuss the analysis and the meaning of
results in the next three sessions. During those labs, we will have
significant incubation times that will be perfect for discussions. Before we
get to those stages, we first need to isolate plasmid DNA to transform into
yeast. We will do this by doing a "DNA miniprep." DNA minipreps
are a very commonly used technique. Laboratories doing any sort of molecular
biology or cloning do minipreps routinely. For lab last week, I outlined
briefly the steps necessary to place ß-galactosidase under the control of
regulatory sequences from another gene. If you wish to read more about cloning
and manipulating genes, see your text, MBoC, 3rd edition, pp.
308330. The most relevant pages are 308312 and 319325.
Once one has ligated the fragments of interest together (for example, a vector
containing the gene encoding ß-galactosidase and the upstream regulatory
region of YFG), one transforms the ligated construct into E.
coli, and recovers transformants.
Getting transformants means that the bacteria have taken up a circular
molecule of DNA carrying resistance to a selectable marker; however, it does
not indicate anything else about the structure of the plasmid. Minipreps of
plasmid DNA are then performed to isolate large quantities of the DNA. It is
then examined by restriction enzyme digestion followed by gel electrophoresis
to determine the molecular structure of the plasmid (we will do this over the
next two weeks). In addition, because our plasmids have particularly
complicated construction histories, we will do a Southern blot to determine
which of the plasmids has the signal sequence region of
-factor (see
below). We will talk more about what Southern blots are and how they work in
the future (see MBoC, 3rd edition, pp. 300303). Finally, we
will transform the plasmids into yeast.
There are three different plasmids and the role of all these bits of DNA will become clear in future weeks.
-factor is a mating pheromone secreted by cells to
"attract" cells of the opposite mating type. Haploid cells of
opposite mating type fuse/mate to make a diploid cell. The gene fusion
contains the signal sequence region of
-factor which directs the
protein into the secretory pathway. The SUC2 coding sequence
is acting as a linker region in this construct. HIS4 encodes
histidinol dehydrogenase. The protein that gets made from this construct is a
hybrid or chimeric protein containing the
-factor signal sequence,
Suc2, and His4.
|
All of the plasmids are "shuttle plasmids" because they can be shuttled between E. coli and S. cerevisiae. E. coli is used as a temporary host for the plasmid for two reasons. First, the plasmid replicates to a higher copy in E. coli than it does in yeast, which allows one to isolate relatively large amounts of plasmid. Second, as explained below, the plasmid can be isolated from E. coli without contaminating chromosomal DNA. This greatly facilitates characterization of plasmids.
In addition to the region that has been engineered to encode a fusion protein, these plasmids have other features of interest. They have two origins of replication: one that functions in bacteria and one that functions in yeast. The origin allows the plasmid to be replicated by the cellular DNA replication machinery. They also have two different selectable markers which allow one to isolate the transformed organisms from the untransformed background organism. For selection in E. coli, the plasmid contains the gene encoding ß-lactamase which causes ampicillin resistance. E. coli strains lacking the plasmid are sensitive to ampicillin and cannot grow on media with the antibiotic; strains with the plasmid can grow on antibiotic-containing media. For selection in S. cerevisiae, the plasmid contains the URA3 gene, encoding OMP decarboxylase, which converts OMP to UMP. Yeast strains with a mutation in their chromosomal copy of URA3 cannot grow on media that are lacking uracil; strains with a chromosomal mutation and containing a plasmid copy of URA3 can make uracil and therefore can grow on media lacking uracil.
Each group of students will do three minipreps, one for each plasmid. Remember that tubes must always be balanced in the microcentrifuge rotor.
The night before lab, I will sterilely inoculate each strain into 5 ml of liquid media with ampicillin.
THINGS TO BE AWARE OF BEFORE YOU START
PROCEDURE FOR ISOLATING DNA
NOTES AND DISCUSSION
What happens in each step?
Glucose/Tris/EDTA: Glucose functions to maintain osmotic pressure, which prevents the cells from lysing prematurely; Tris buffers the cells at pH 8.0. EDTA binds divalent cations in the lipid bilayer, which thus weakens the cell envelope. Following cell lysis, the EDTA is critically important in limiting DNA degradation by binding Mg++ ions that are necessary cofactors for nucleases.
SDS/NaOH: This alkaline mixture lyses the cells. The SDS detergent solubilizes the lipid components of the cell envelope and the cellular proteins. Sodium hydroxide denatures the chromosomal and plasmid DNA into single strands.
KOAc (potassium acetate/acetic acid): The acetic acid brings the pH to neutral, which allows the DNA strands to renature. The denatured DNA has remained intertwined, since both the plasmid DNA and the chromosomal DNA are circular. However, the much larger, disrupted chromosomal DNA cannot rehybridize perfectly and instead collapses into a partially hybridized tangle. At the same time, the potassium acetate precipitates the SDS from the cell suspension, along with associated proteins and lipids. The renaturing chromosomal DNA is trapped in the SDS/lipid/protein precipitate. Only smaller plasmid DNA fragments of chromosomal DNA and RNA molecules escape the precipitate and remain in solution.
Phenol/Chloroform/IAA: This step extracts additional proteins from the solution. It is particularly critical to get rid of any nucleases.
EtOH: The alcohol precipitates nucleic acids. 70% EtOH wash: This removes some remaining salts and SDS from the preparation.
Tris/EDTA: As explained above, Tris buffers the DNA solution and EDTA protects the DNA from degradation by DNAses.
| APPENDIX B Secretion Lab II: Yeast Transformation and DNA Restriction Analysis |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Both procedures have relatively long incubationsan hour each. Start the yeast transformation, and then set up your plasmid digests. It is fine if the DNA digestions incubate longer than 1 hour, but they need to incubate for at least this amount of time.
YEAST TRANSFORMATION
We will have already prepared the cells for the transformation. If you are
interested in how this is done, ask!
All steps should be done with good sterile technique! The only thing that should grow on your plates are the yeast cells that have been transformed! Your skin, the bench surface, and the air all have microorganisms contaminating them. Our goal is to keep them OUT of the solutions, cultures, and petri dishes with which we will be working. We will talk about how to do this at the beginning of lab.
PROTOCOL
DNA DIGESTION AND ANALYSIS
|
| APPENDIX C Secretion Lab III: Agarose Gel Electrophoresis, Southern Blotting, and Yeast Phenotypic Analysis |
|---|
|
|
|---|
This week we will analyze the restriction digests on your plasmid minipreps
by gel electrophoresis and Southern blotting. Next week, we will probe the
Southerns with a piece of DNA specific for the
-factor signal sequence
region. Through these analyses, you will be able to characterize the physical
structure of your plasmids.
First you will run an agarose gel with your DNA. Gel electrophoresis separates the DNA on the basis of size. The number of fragments present will tell you how many sites for each restriction enzyme exist and how far apart they are. From the maps of the plasmids provided and the sizes of your DNA fragments, you may be able to deduce which plasmid is which. For a review of restriction endonucleases and gel electrophoresis, see Alberts et al., 3rd edition, pp. 291295.
The next part of the analysis is a Southern blot (named for Edward
Southern, who first described the method). This technique is used to identify
specific restriction fragments in a complex mixture. In a Southern blot, the
DNA is transferred from the fragile agarose gel onto a more durable membrane
that is accessible to DNA probes. The procedure preserves the distribution of
fragments in the gel, creating a replica of the gel on the membrane. Read pp.
300303 in Alberts et al., 3rd edition, to familiarize yourself
with the method. Similar techniques to transfer RNA and proteins out of gels
onto membranes are called Northern and Western blots, respectively (just to be
clever, no one named Western or Northern developed them). In lab next week, we
will hybridize the blots to a probe that contains DNA that encodes the
-factor signal sequence to determine which of the plasmids contains
that segment of DNA.
PROTOCOL
Gel Electrophoresis
20 µl) into the wells of the gel. Keep track of
the DNA and enzyme that was digested within each of your wells. If you don't
know what sample was loaded, it will be impossible to make sense of your data.
Plan how you are going to load your gel before you come to class. The Et will intercalate into your DNA as well as the plasmid DNA samples. It is a mutagen because it affects base pairing and the fidelity of DNA replication. Be careful! Wear gloves and do not touch other equipment or doorknobs if you have touched the gel or running buffer.
While the gel is running, prepare for the Southern blot by cutting paper towels and chromatography paper and rereading the protocol. They should be the same size as the gel. You can also determine the expected sizes for each of your restriction digests from the maps I will give you and spot your yeast transformants (see below).
Southern Blotting It is important to do the following steps for the specified times. Make sure that you know what you are going to do next.
Do NOT touch the nylon membrane or the gel with your fingers.
|
|
Phenotypic Analysis of Transformants The yeast transformants will be analyzed on two different types of media. The first lacks uracil and histidine (SC-H-U) and the second lacks only uracil (SC-U). Only cells which can make their own uracil and histidine can grow on the first set of media. Each team of students will work with transformants from three yeast strainsone that they transfomed, and two other strains. There are a wild-type strain and two mutant strains. One of the mutants has a mutation in the SEC61 gene, and the other in the SEC18 gene.
| APPENDIX D Secretion Lab IV: Probing Southern Blots and Yeast Phenotypic Analysis |
|---|
|
|
|---|
| APPENDIX E Ideas and Questions for the Secretion Lab Write-Up |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The absolute maximum length of the paper should be 10 pages of double-spaced text (not including figures) with 1-inch margins all around. We will not read more than this. Please do not use a tiny font size to get around this limit. It will make us grumpy. There have been great "A" papers with 7 pages of text. Don't forget to put your name only on the back of the report like you did for the enhancer trap labwe would prefer to grade them with your identity anonymous.
General background.Do you understand what was meant by the statement "The secretion-defective mutant strains are conditional"? Why is this important? Did you expect the sec61 and sec18 mutants to behave differently from each other in your phenotypic analysis? Why or why not? Could the fusion constructs that we used be used to isolate mutants that are defective in the secretory pathway? Why or why not?
Minipreps of plasmid DNA/restriction analysis/southern blots. What will be included in the Results section of your write-up from this set of experiments? Can you describe the basic differences and similarities between the three plasmids? What was the goal of the restriction digests? Of the Southerns? Which miniprep corresponds to which plasmid and how did you determine this?
If you are not certain about how restriction enzymes work or how DNA fragments are resolved on agarose gels on the basis of size, please review Alberts et al., pp. 292295.
The restriction analyses may NOT be wholly compatible with the map that I have given you. I honestly tried to draw the best map that I could given the explanation of the plasmid construction found in relevant publications and the maps that were constructed by last year's class. However, it was quite complicated, involving a number of intermediate steps with plasmids that were not very well described. It is quite likely that you will have to modify the map to make it consistent with data we have gathered in the lab. In other words, if the restriction digestion of the plasmid is complete and the sizes or numbers of bands do not correlate with what was expected from the map, it is the map that is incorrect, NOT the restriction enzyme. Fragment sizes for unknowns can be estimated by interpolation between the marker bands of known molecular weight. Scientists often use standard curves generated from the molecular weight markers. You may do this if you like; alternatively you may interpolate between the markers by "eye."
If necessary, please include a modified map in your lab report. I have put
the Canvas file with the map I handed out in lab on the class server if you
wish to use it. The best modified maps will include data from all three
digests and your Southern blot. You can use your Southern blot to determine
which fragments in the pRSB204 digests contain sequences from the
-factor gene.
Although I am not positive about the exact maps, I am certain about the relationships among the plasmids. Both pRSB203 and pRSB204 have inserts of yeast DNA into the plasmid vector YEp24. Therefore, all three plasmids should have some fragments in common, and some fragments that differ. Plasmid pRSB204 was constructed from pRSB203 by deletion of one segment of pRSB203 and insertion of DNA from a different plasmid that contained the alpha-factor signal sequence. Thus, these two plasmids should have more fragments in common than either one does with the vector, and the differences should map only to the promoter/signal sequence section of the fusion construct. The numbers on the maps are the numbers from the DNA sequences of the different segments. Because the fragments are from different pieces of DNA, the numbering is not continuous. If you wish to find the size of a fragment that spans a segment boundary, you will have to calculate the size of both fragments that span the boundary. If you discuss the presence or absence of specific bands, make sure that it is straightforward for a reader to know which bands are being referred to in the text (perhaps by labeling them on the figure?).
Yeast transformation. What are your results for this section? How will you present the data? What were the positive and negative controls for the yeast transformation?
Phenotypic analysis. For this section, which plasmid is the negative control, which is the positive control, and why? What are your results? How will you present the data? Which strain is wild type, sec18, and sec61 and how did you determine this? Did your results match your hypotheses?
General notes. The paper should be able to be understood by someone who has had a cell biology course at some point but has not necessarily done these experiments (for example, someone who took cell biology a different year, or at a different institution).
For materials and methods, you need describe only deviations from or additions to the protocol given out in lab.
A complete laboratory report will have information in the introduction or discussion from at least one source other than your textbook or my lab handouts. Connect what you learn from reading that source to the material in your introduction or discussion. A WWW citation may be useful, but it is not sufficient to fulfill this criterion.
This lab report may have the most data about which you have written; and your results may not completely match your original hypotheses (found on the table you filled out for the last week of experimentation). Make certain that you organize your thoughts and writing. Most likely, some of the sections will need subheadings. Your Introduction and Discussion may "flow" without the use of subheadings, but scientific papers frequently have subheadings for clarity in the Methods and Materials, and Results sections.
Carefully read over the comments on your Drosophila enhancer trap lab and chloroplast lab to see where you need to improve your writing or analysis. Papers should be carefully proofread before submission. Also, W.A.'s are on staff at the Writing Center should you want help from an expert.
| APPENDIX F Ideas and Questions for the Secretion Discussion |
|---|
|
|
|---|
The goal for our discussion is to allow you to demonstrate your understanding of the set of laboratories we have done on secretion. I encourage you to talk with each other or to your friends about the laboratory to practice. As I discussed, being able to explain things orally to others is a skill that is important in most careers, and this discussion session will allow you to have some more experience with this sort of task. In addition, students in the past have found writing a laboratory report on this lab series very time consuming and stressful, and I am hopeful that this exercise will seem less onerous to you, while still allowing me to probe your understanding of the material.
I will have some questions that I will ask you. Jocelyne and Darlene Bramucci will be present during the discussion to help record your answers for the purposes of grading. You may bring with you photos of your data with figure legends (for example, the pictures of your gel, your plates, etc.). You should be able to explain how you generated the data, what the data suggest, and your interpretation of them. Annotating things carefully and evaluating what you should bring is an important part of preparing for our discussion.
Plasmids: minipreps of plasmid DNA/restriction analysis/Southern blots. Can you describe the basic differences and similarities between the three plasmids? What was the goal of the restriction digests? Of the Southerns? Which miniprep corresponds to which plasmid and how did you determine this?
If you are not certain about how restriction enzymes work or how DNA fragments are resolved on agarose gels on the basis of size, please review Alberts et al., pp. 292295.
The restriction analyses may NOT be wholly compatible with the map that I have given you. I honestly tried to draw the best map that I could given the explanation of the plasmid construction found in relevant publications and the maps that were constructed by last year's class. However, it was quite complicated, involving a number of intermediate steps with plasmids that were not very well described. It is possible that you will have to modify the map to make it consistent with data we have gathered in the lab. In other words, if the restriction digestion of the plasmid is complete and the sizes or numbers of bands do not correlate with what was expected from the map, it is the map that is incorrect, NOT the restriction enzyme. If necessary, you may bring a modified map with you to our discussion. I have put the Canvas file with the map I handed out in lab on the class server if you wish to use it.
Although I am not positive about the exact maps, I am certain about the relationships among the plasmids. Both pRSB203 and pRSB204 have inserts of yeast DNA into the plasmid vector YEp24. Therefore, all three plasmids should have some fragments in common, and some fragments that differ. Plasmid pRSB204 was constructed from pRSB203 by deletion of one segment of pRSB203 and insertion of DNA from a different plasmid that contained the alpha-factor signal sequence. Thus, these two plasmids should have more fragments in common than either one does with the vector, and the differences should map only to the promoter/signal sequence section of the fusion construct. The numbers on the maps are the numbers from the DNA sequences of the different segments. Because the fragments are from different pieces of DNA, the numbering is not continuous. If you wish to find the size of a fragment that spans a segment boundary, you will have to calculate the size of both fragments that span the boundary. If you discuss the presence or absence of specific bands, make sure that it is straightforward to explain which bands are being referred to in the text (perhaps by labeling them on the figure?).
Yeast transformation: What are your results for this section? What were the positive and negative controls for the yeast transformation?
Phenotypic analysis: For this section, which plasmid is the negative control, which is the positive control, and why? What are your results? Which strain is wild type, sec18, and sec61 and how did you determine this? Did your results match your hypotheses?
Big picture: Can you describe the basic steps that are important for the import of proteins into the ER and their transit through the secretory pathway? What are the roles of Sec61p and Sec18p in cells? Do you understand what was meant by the statement "the secretion-defective mutant strains are conditional"? Why is this important? Did you expect the sec61 and sec18 mutants to behave differently from each other in your phenotypic analysis? Why or why not? How could the fusion constructs that we used be used to isolate mutants that are defective in the secretory pathway?
| ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
|---|
| FOOTNOTES |
|---|
Corresponding author. E-mail address: evallen1{at}swarthmore.edu.
| REFERENCES |
|---|
|
|
|---|
Akada, R., Murakane, T., and Nishizawa, Y. (2000). DNA extraction method for screening yeast clones by PCR.BioTechniques 28,668 -674.[Medline]
Alberts, B., Johnson, A., Lewis, J., Raff, M., Roberts, K., and Walter, P. (2002). Molecular Biology of the Cell, New York: Garland.
Ausubel, F.M., Brent, R., Kingston, R.E., Moore, D.D., Seidman, J.G., Smith, J.A., and Struhl, K. (1987). Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, New York: WileyInterscience.
Ausubel, F.M., Brent, R., Kingston, R.E., Moore, D.D., Seidman, J.G., Smith, J.A., and Struhl, K. (1995). Short Protocols in Molecular Biology: A Compendium of Methods from Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, New York: WileyInterscience.
Becker, W.M., Kleinsmith, L.J., and Hardin, J. (2000).The World of the Cell , San Francisco: Benjamin Cummings.
Burke, D., Dawson, D., and Stearns, T. (2000).Methods in Yeast Genetics: A Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Course Manual , Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
Deshaies, R.J., and Schekman, R. (1987). A yeast
mutant defective at an early stage in import of secretory protein precursors
into the endoplasmic reticulum. J. Cell. Biol.
105,633
-645.
Ferro-Novick, S., Novick, P., Field, C., and Schekman R.
(1984). Yeast secretory mutants that block the formation of
active cell surface enzymes. J. Cell Biol.
98,35
-43.
Kaiser, C.A., and Schekman, R. (1990). Distinct sets of SEC genes govern transport vesicle formation and fusion early in the secretory pathway. Cell 61,723 -733.[CrossRef][Medline]
Novick, P., Field, C., and Schekman, R. (1980). Identification of 23 complementation groups required for post-translational events in the yeast secretory pathway. Cell 21,205 -215.[CrossRef][Medline]
Novick, P., and Schekman, R. (1979). Secretion and
cell-surface growth are blocked in a temperature-sensitive mutant of
Saccharomyces cerevisiae. Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
76,1858
-1862.
Odom, D.P., and Grossel, M.J. (2002). Using the
two-hybrid screen in the classroom laboratory. Cell Biol. Educ.
1, 43-62.
Oliver, D.B., and Beckwith, J. (1981). E. coli mutant pleiotropically defective in the export of secreted proteins.Cell 25,765 -772.[CrossRef][Medline]
Robb, A., and Brown, J.D. (2001). Protein transport: two translocons are better than one. Mol. Cell 8,484 -486.[Medline]
Romisch, K. (1999). Surfing the Sec61 channel: bidirectional protein translocation across the ER membrane. J. Cell Sci. 112,4185 -4191.[Abstract]
Sambrook, J., Fritsch, E.F., and Maniatis, T. (1989).Molecular Cloning: A Laboratory Manual , Cold Spring Harbor, NY: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press.
Watson, J.D., Hopkins, N.H., Roberts, J.W., Steitz, J.A., and Weiner, A.M. (1987). Molecular Biology of the Gene, Menlo Park, CA: Benjamin Cummings.
Wilson, D.W., Wilcox, C.A., Flynn, G.C., Chen, E., Kuang, W.J., Henzel, W.J., Block, M.R., Ullrich, A., and Rothman, J.E. (1989). A fusion protein required for vesicle-mediated transport in both mammalian cells and yeast. Nature 339,355 -359.[CrossRef][Medline]
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |