23.8 In Vitro Experimental Methods
327
undesirable features, such as the need to label the proteins and the possibility of
unfavourable alignment of the fluorophores, such that energy transfer is hindered
even though A and B are indeed associated.
RNA–protein binding can be investigated by the systematic evolution of ligands by
the exponential enrichment (SELEX) technique, in which candidate RNA oligomers
(possibly initially random) are passed through an affinity column of the protein of
interest. Retained RNA is eluted, amplified using PCR, and reapplied to the column.
The cycle is repeated until most of the RNA binds, whereupon it is sequenced.
23.8 In Vitro Experimental Methods
Here affinities are measured outside the cell. At least one of the proteins of interest
has to be isolated and purified. It can then be immobilized on a chromatographic
column and the entire cell contents passed through the column. Any other proteins
interacting with the target protein will be bound to the column and can be identified
after elution.
A much more powerful approach, because it allows precise characterization of
the kinetics of both association and dissociation, is to immobilize the purified target
protein on a transducer able to respond to the presence of proteins binding to the target.
The combination of capture layer and transducer is called a biosensor (Fig. 23.1).
Although this approach is formally in vitro, the physiological milieu can be repro-
duced to practically any level of detail. Indeed, as pointed out in the introduction to
this chapter, the microenvironment of a subcellular compartment can be more pre-
cisely investigated than in vivo. Nevertheless, since each interaction is individually
measured, with as much detail as is required, high throughput is only possible with
Fig. 23.1 Schematic representation of a biosensor. The thickness and structure of the capture
layer, which concentrates the analyte, whose presence can then be registered by the transducer,
largely determines the temporal response. The main transducer types are mechanical (cantilevers, the
quartz crystal microbalance), electrical (electrodes, field-effect transistors), optoelectronic (surface
plasmon resonance), and optical (planar waveguides, optical fibres). See Ramsden (1994) and
Scheller and Schubert (1989) for comprehensive overviews.