Title: Key points
1Cell Biology Techniques
Key points stages in analysis of cellular
process microscopy of fixed or live
cells approaches to identify proteins protein
purification techniques
2Mitosis in animal cells how does it work?
3 Steps in cell biological analysis of a
process 1. Describe it 2. Identify players 3.
Reconstitute in vitro 4. Test models in vivo
and in vitro
4Microscopy excellent descriptive tool, 2 major
types
- Magnification, Contrast, Resolution
- Light Microscopy (200 nm)
- Brightfield
- Fluorescent
- Advanced
- Electron Microscopy (1 nm)
- Transmission
- Scanning
55.1 The light microscope
Figure 5-2
Min. distance between objects (D)
0.61(wavelength) / (refractive index)(sin a)
65.1 Brightfield microscopy
- Problem Most cells are colorless transparent
- To visualize structures ? stain with dyes
- Must preserve (fix), embed, section
- New problem ? these actions
- Alter cell structure/molecules
- Only give snapshot of dead cells
75.1 Fluorescent microscopy
- Permits localization of specific cellular
molecules - Fluorescent dyes glow against dark background
- Dye may be indirectly or directly associated with
- the cellular molecule
- Multiple fluorescent dyes may be used
simultaneously - Cells may be fixed or living
8How to localize a protein with fluorescence
microscopy
95.1 The fluorescent microscope
Figure 5-6
Figure 5-5
105.1 Light microscopy of three-dimensional objects
- Confocal Scanning or Deconvolution Microscopy
- Generates 3D images of living cells
- Removes out-of-focus images ? optical sectioning
- Can look inside thick specimens (eggs, embryos,
tissues)
Figure 5-9
115.1 Advanced light microscopy
- Permits observation of transparent living cells
- Light phase shifts induced by specimen are used
to - generate contrast
- Phase contrast (refracted and unrefracted light)
- Differential interference contrast (two light
beams)
Figure 5-14
125.1 The transmission electron microscope
Figure 5-16
Figure 5-15
13Immuno-EM can localize a specific type of protein
14- Techniques to identify the proteins involved
- Pharmacological Approach find drugs that perturb
process. -
- Genetic Approach setup a selection or screen
which allows identification of mutations that
perturb the process - Biochemical Approach reconstitute the process in
a cell free system ("in vitro"), purify the
molecules that are required for the in vitro
assay to work
15- Pharmacological Approach find drugs that perturb
process. - specificity of inhibitor is important
- Particularly useful if the drug has a known
specific mechanism of action (eg inhibition of a
certain protein gt that protein is required for
the process). - drug may block by binding protein involved in the
process, so even if mechanism of action is
unknown the drug might be used to "fish out" the
protein it binds (e.g. by affinity
chromatography) - affinity chromatography link drug (or any
ligand) to beads in a column, pass cell lysate
over column, proteins that bind column can then
be eluted and analyzed (for example by SDS-PAGE)
163.5 Separation of proteins by specific binding to
another molecule affinity chromatography
Figure 3-43c
17- Genetic Approach setup a selection or screen
which allows identification of mutations that
perturb the process - specificity of selection or screen is important
- if mutation is known then the corresponding
protein is implicated - if mutation is not known the mutated gene may
identified by complementation and sequence
analysis
18- Biochemical Approach reconstitute the process in
a cell free system ("in vitro"), purify the
molecules that are required for the in vitro
assay to work - fidelity of the reconstitution is important (ie
does in vitro assay in vivo?) - to reconstitute a process the cells are
permeabilized or fractionated - subcellular fractionation typically involves
homogenization, differential centrifugation, or
gradient centrifugation - centrifugation separates on the basis of mass and
density - to purify the proteins you need separation
techniques and an assay
19- How are proteins purified?
- electrophoresis separates on the basis of
charge/mass ratio. SDS-PAGE is very effective but
involved denaturation of the protein sample. Two
dimensional electrophoresis has even more
resolving power. - gel filtration beads with pores of defined
sizes, separates on basis of mass ( shape)
because molecules partition into pore as they
pass through column - ion exchange beads with defined charge,
separates on basis of charge, elute w/ salt or pH - affinity as above binding is to ligand on
column. Note that if antibody is used it is also
called immunoprecipitation. - hydrophobic beads with acyl chains, separates on
basis of hydrophobicity, elute with hydrophobic
buffer
203.5 Electrophoresis separates molecules according
to their chargemass ratio
SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis
Figure 3-41
213.5 Separation of proteins by size gel
filtration chromatography
Figure 3-43a
223.5 Separation of proteins by charge ion
exchange chromatography
Figure 3-43b