250
- Produce the protein substrate in the cell free TNT ® Coupled
Transcription/Translation System (TNT ® mix) according the
manufacturer’s instructions (Promega). A choice can be made
here to use radiolabeled L -[^35 S]methionine for subsequent
readout by autoradiography or unlabeled methionine and epi-
tope tags for western blotting. - Prepare the metacaspase reaction master mix by mixing 80 μL
of 4× reaction buffer with 120 μL of dH 2 O. Divide 25 μL per
well over an 8-well eppi strip. - Add 5 μL of the TNT ® mix to the side of each well. Take care:
the drop of TNT ® mix should not touch the metacaspase reac-
tion mix. - The reaction is started by the simultaneous addition of 10 μL
of the rAtMC4 dilution series to the 8-well eppi strip with the
help of a multichannel pipette and by pipetting the metacas-
pase reaction and TNT ® mix up and down. The reaction is
carried out at 30 °C for 30 min. - The reaction is stopped by the simultaneous addition of 10 μL
of the 5× Laemmli buffer + EGTA ( see Note 10 ) to each well.
The samples are heated for 5 min at 85 °C and can be stored
at −20 °C or immediately used in the subsequent steps. - Load 15 μL of each sample on a 12 % SDS-PAGE gel and run
the electrophoresis. - After electrophoresis, rinse the gel shortly in dH 2 O and dry
for 1 h on a Whatman paper in a gel dryer when using autora-
diography as a readout, or proceed to western blot as detailed
in Subheading 3.4 with the appropriate antibody against the
used epitope tag. - For autoradiography, expose the dried gel for 48 h to a phos-
phor screen and make the readout on a phosphor imager with
appropriate settings ( see Note 11 ).
Fig. 3 In vitro metacaspase protein substrate cleavage assay. A potential substrate
protein is cleaved by an increasing concentration of recombinant Arabidopsis
thaliana metacaspase 4 (rAtMC4) to discrete cleavage products ( top panel ).
Glutathione S-transferase (GST) does not get cleaved by metacaspase ( bottom
panel ). Concentrations are indicated in the fi gure. Inactive rAtMC4, in which the
active site cysteine is mutated to alanine (C139A), acts as a negative control
Elena A. Minina et al.
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