Abstract
Arabidopsis pollen is an excellent system for answering important biological questions about the establishment and maintenance of cellular polarity and polar cell growth, because these processes are amenable to the genetic and genomic approaches that are readily available in Arabidopsis. Given that proteins are the direct executors of a wide variety of cellular processes, it is important to rapidly and efficiently isolate total protein for various protein-based analyses, such as Western blotting, co-immunoprecipitation and mass spectrometry, among others. Here we present a protocol for rapid isolation of total protein from Arabidopsis pollen, which is adapted from our recently published paper (Chang and Huang, 2015).
Keywords: Arabidopsis thaliana, Flower, Pollen, Protein isolation, Western blot
Background
Pollen is a critical stage during the life cycle of sexually-reproducing plants. Pollen germination and subsequent tube growth provide the passage for two non-motile sperm cells to effect double fertilization in flowering plants. Pollen is routinely used as a model system to addressing fundamental cell biological questions, such as the establishment and maintenance of cell polarity and polar cell growth, as well as the structure and function of the actin cytoskeleton (Chen et al., 2009; Qu et al., 2015). Generally, pollen derived from lily and tobacco was widely used due to the large size of the grains, which makes them easy to collect and observe under the microscope. In contrast, Arabidopsis pollen is small and it is relatively difficult to collect a large amount of pollen to isolate a sufficient quantity of protein for downstream analyses such as Western blotting and mass spectrometry. Therefore, development of a protocol to rapidly isolate total protein from Arabidopsis pollen will facilitate related analyses.
Materials and Reagents
Equipment
Procedure
Data analysis
SDS-PAGE and Western blot analyses of Arabidopsis pollen total proteins are shown in Figure 2. Total proteins isolated from Arabidopsis rosette leaves, in which the small subunit of Rubisco is by far the most abundant component, were used as the control (Figure 2A). In contrast, the band corresponding to the small subunit of Rubisco is hardly detected in the pollen total proteins (Figure 2B). This means that detection of proteins other than the small subunit of Rubisco might be easier in Arabidopsis total protein extract. For instance, by loading 10 μg of total proteins from pollen per lane, α-tubulin (TUA), actin (ACT), cytochrome c oxidase subunit II (COXII) and profilin (PRF) can be easily detected (Figure 2B). Figure 2. SDS-PAGE analysis of total proteins isolated from Arabidopsis pollen and leaves, and Western blot analysis of total proteins from Arabidopsis pollen probed with several antibodies. A. SDS-PAGE analysis of total proteins (50 μg) isolated from Arabidopsis rosette leaves. The nitrocellulose (NC) membrane was stained with Ponceau S after protein transfer. B. The left panel shows the SDS-PAGE analysis of total proteins (10 μg) isolated from Arabidopsis pollen. The NC membrane was stained with Ponceau S after protein transfer. The right panel shows the Western blot analysis of Arabidopsis pollen total proteins probed with anti-α-tubulin, anti-actin, anti-COXII and profilin antibodies. The profilin antibody was generated in our laboratory; see the details in our published paper (Liu et al., 2015). Other antibodies are commercially available: anti-α-tubulin (Beyotime Biotechnology, AT819), anti-actin (Abmart, M20009) and anti-COXII (Agrisera, AS04 053A).
Notes
Generally, 100 Col-0 flowers will yield about 100 μg total protein from pollen with this method.
Recipes
Acknowledgments
This protocol was modified from our previously published work (Chang and Huang, 2015). The work in Huang’s lab was supported by funding from the Ministry of Science and Technology of China (2013CB945100) and the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31671390 and 31471266).
References
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