A scalable strategy for high-throughput GFP tagging of endogenous human proteins
Top Cited Papers
- 6 June 2016
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 113 (25), 201606731-8
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606731113
Abstract
A central challenge of the postgenomic era is to comprehensively characterize the cellular role of the ∼20,000 proteins encoded in the human genome. To systematically study protein function in a native cellular background, libraries of human cell lines expressing proteins tagged with a functional sequence at their endogenous loci would be very valuable. Here, using electroporation of Cas9 nuclease/single-guide RNA ribonucleoproteins and taking advantage of a split-GFP system, we describe a scalable method for the robust, scarless, and specific tagging of endogenous human genes with GFP. Our approach requires no molecular cloning and allows a large number of cell lines to be processed in parallel. We demonstrate the scalability of our method by targeting 48 human genes and show that the resulting GFP fluorescence correlates with protein expression levels. We next present how our protocols can be easily adapted for the tagging of a given target with GFP repeats, critically enabling the study of low-abundance proteins. Finally, we show that our GFP tagging approach allows the biochemical isolation of native protein complexes for proteomic studies. Taken together, our results pave the way for the large-scale generation of endogenously tagged human cell lines for the proteome-wide analysis of protein localization and interaction networks in a native cellular context.Keywords
All Related Versions
Funding Information
- HHS | NIH | National Institute of Mental Health (R21MH101688)
- NIH Director's New Innovator Award (DP2OD008479)
- Howard Hughes Medical Institute (N/A)
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- A Human Interactome in Three Quantitative Dimensions Organized by Stoichiometries and AbundancesCell, 2015
- Systematic Discovery of Human Gene Function and Principles of Modular Organization through Phylogenetic ProfilingCell Reports, 2015
- RNA-programmed genome editing in human cellseLife, 2013
- The Contribution of Systematic Approaches to Characterizing the Proteins and Functions of the Endoplasmic ReticulumCold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology, 2013
- Diversity of Clathrin Function: New Tricks for an Old ProteinAnnual Review of Cell and Developmental Biology, 2012
- Global landscape of protein complexes in the yeast Saccharomyces cerevisiaeNature, 2006
- Finishing the euchromatic sequence of the human genomeNature, 2004
- Global analysis of protein expression in yeastNature, 2003
- Global analysis of protein localization in budding yeastNature, 2003
- Functional organization of the yeast proteome by systematic analysis of protein complexesNature, 2002