Split-BioID: a proximity biotinylation assay for dimerization-dependent protein interactions

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Abstract

The biotin identification (BioID) protocol uses a mutant of the biotin ligase BirA (BirA*) fused to a protein-of-interest to biotinylate proximate proteins in intact cells. Here, we show that two inactive halves of BirA* separately fused to a catalytic and regulatory subunit of protein phosphatase PP1 reconstitute a functional BirA* enzyme upon heterodimerization of the phosphatase subunits. We also demonstrate that this BirA* fragment complementation approach, termed split-BioID, can be used to screen for substrates and other protein interactors of PP1 holoenzymes. Split-BioID is a novel and versatile tool for the identification of (transient) interactors of protein dimers.

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De Munter, S., Görnemann, J., Derua, R., Lesage, B., Qian, J., Heroes, E., … Bollen, M. (2017). Split-BioID: a proximity biotinylation assay for dimerization-dependent protein interactions. FEBS Letters, 591(2), 415–424. https://doi.org/10.1002/1873-3468.12548

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