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In Vivo Protein Cross-Linking
Abstract
In the cell, homo- and heteroassociations of polypeptide chains evolve and take place within subcellular compartments that are crowded with many other cellular macromolecules. In vivo chemical cross-linking of proteins is a powerful method to examine changes in protein oligomerization and protein-protein interactions upon cellular events such as signal transduction. This chapter is intended to provide a guide to the selection of the cell-membrane-permeable cross-linkers, the optimization of in vivo cross-linking conditions, and the identification of specific cross-links in a cellular context where the frequency of random collisions is high. By combining the chemoselectivity of the homo-bifunctional cross-linker and the length of its spacer arm with knowledge on the protein structure, we show that selective cross-links can be introduced specifically on either the dimer or the hexamer form of the same polypeptide in vitro as well as in vivo, using the human type B nucleoside diphosphate kinase as a protein model.
Affiliation(s): (2) Département de Biologie Structurale et Chimie, Institut Pasteur, Paris, France
Series: Methods in Molecular Biology  |  Volume: 261  |  Pub. Date: Mar-23-2004  |  Page Range: 427-442  |  DOI: 10.1385/1-59259-762-9:427
Subject:  Protein Science
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