Preparation of highly enriched ER membranes using free-flow electrophoresis

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Abstract

Free-flow electrophoresis (FFE) is a technique for separation of proteins, peptides, organelles, and cells. With zone electrophoresis (ZE-FFE), organelles are separated according to surface charge. The ER is the only remaining major cellular compartment in Arabidopsis not to have been isolated using density centrifugation, immune-isolation, or any other method previously applied to purification of plant membranes. By using continuous-flow electrophoresis ER vesicles of similar surface charge, which may have been fragmented during cell lysis, can be focused. A large portion of these vesicles are of sufficiently different surface charge that separation from the majority of Golgi and other contaminants is possible. Here we adapt an earlier ZE-FFE Golgi isolation protocol for the isolation of highly pure ER vesicles and for tracking the migration of peripheral ER vesicles. Isolating ER vesicles of homogenous surface charge allows multi-'omic analyses to be performed on the ER. This facilitates investigations into structure–function relationships within the ER.

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Parsons, H. T. (2018). Preparation of highly enriched ER membranes using free-flow electrophoresis. In Methods in Molecular Biology (Vol. 1691, pp. 103–115). Humana Press Inc. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-7389-7_8

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