Subcellular fractionation of frozen skeletal muscle samples.

Subcellular fractionation of frozen skeletal muscle samples. Biochem Cell Biol. 2019 Oct 12;: Authors: Firmino Dias PR, Gandra PG, Brenzikofer R, Macedo DV Abstract Cell fractionation can be used to determine the localization and trafficking of proteins between cellular compartments such as cytosol, mitochondria and nuclei. Subcellular fractionation is usually performed immediately after tissue dissection since freezing may fragment cell membranes and induce organellar cross-contamination. Mitochondria are especially sensitive to freezing/thawing and mechanical homogenization. We proposed a protocol to improve soluble proteins retention in the mitochondrial fraction obtained from small amounts of frozen skeletal muscle. Fifty-milligram of red portion of gastrocnemius muscle from Wistar rats were immediately processed or frozen in liquid nitrogen and stored at -80°C for further processing. We compared the enrichment of subcellular fractions from frozen/fresh samples obtained with the modified protocol with those obtained by standard fractionation. Western blot analyses of marker proteins for cytosolic (alpha-tubulin), mitochondrial (VDAC1), and nuclear (histone-H3) fractions indicated that all procedures resulted in enriched subcellular fractions with minimal organellar cross-contamination. Notably, the activity of the soluble protein citrate synthase was higher in mitochondrial fractions obtained with the modified protocol from froz...
Source: Biochemistry and Cell Biology - Category: Biochemistry Authors: Tags: Biochem Cell Biol Source Type: research