Multiplex Hextuple Luciferase Assaying.

Methods Mol Biol

Verna and Marrs McLean Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.

Published: July 2022


Category Ranking

98%

Total Visits

921

Avg Visit Duration

2 minutes

Citations

20

Article Abstract

We recently expanded the commonly used dual luciferase assaying method toward multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying, allowing monitoring the activity of five experimental pathways against one control at the same time. In doing so, while our expanded assay utilizes a total of six orthogonal luciferases instead of two, this assay, conveniently, still utilizes the well-established reagents and principles of the widely used dual luciferase assay. Three quenchable D-luciferin-consuming luciferases are measured after addition of D-Luciferin substrate, followed by quenching of their bioluminescence (BL) and the measurement of three coelenterazine (CTZ)-consuming luciferases after addition of CTZ substrate, all in the same vessel. Here, we provide detailed protocols on how to perform such multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying to monitor cellular signal processing upstream of five transcription factors and their corresponding transcription factor-binding motifs, using a constitutive promoter as normalization control. The first protocol is provided on how to perform cell culture in preparation toward genetic or pharmaceutical perturbations, as well as transfecting a multiplex hextuple luciferase reporter vector encoding all luciferase reporter units needed for multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying. The second protocol details on how to execute multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying using a microplate reader appropriately equipped to detect the different BLs emitted by all six luciferases. Finally, the third protocol provides details on analyzing, plotting, and interpreting the data obtained by the microplate reader.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10157609PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-0716-2453-1_33DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

multiplex hextuple
24
hextuple luciferase
24
luciferase assaying
24
luciferase
9
dual luciferase
8
luciferase reporter
8
protocol details
8
microplate reader
8
multiplex
6
assaying
6

Similar Publications

Multiplex Hextuple Luciferase Assaying.

Methods Mol Biol

July 2022

Verna and Marrs McLean Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.

We recently expanded the commonly used dual luciferase assaying method toward multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying, allowing monitoring the activity of five experimental pathways against one control at the same time. In doing so, while our expanded assay utilizes a total of six orthogonal luciferases instead of two, this assay, conveniently, still utilizes the well-established reagents and principles of the widely used dual luciferase assay. Three quenchable D-luciferin-consuming luciferases are measured after addition of D-Luciferin substrate, followed by quenching of their bioluminescence (BL) and the measurement of three coelenterazine (CTZ)-consuming luciferases after addition of CTZ substrate, all in the same vessel.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Synthetic Assembly DNA Cloning of Multiplex Hextuple Luciferase Reporter Plasmids.

Methods Mol Biol

July 2022

Verna and Marrs McLean Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, TX, USA.

Multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying allows monitoring the activity of five experimental pathways against one control at the same time. To perform multiplex hextuple luciferase assaying, six orthogonal luciferase reporter units are needed of which five are pathway-specific and one acts as a control for normalization. To ensure stoichiometric delivery of all six luciferase reporters in every transfected cell, synthetic assembly DNA cloning is used to stitch together all six luciferase reporter units into a single vector.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Multiplex experimentation that can assay multiple cellular signaling pathways in the same cells requires orthogonal genetically encoded reporters that report over large dynamic ranges. Luciferases are cost-effective, versatile candidates whose output signals can be sensitively detected in a multiplex fashion. Commonly used dual luciferase reporter assays detect one luciferase that is coupled to a single cellular pathway and a second that is coupled to a control pathway for normalization purposes.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

High-throughput cell-based screening assays are valuable tools in the discovery of chemical probes and therapeutic agents. Such assays are designed to examine the effects of small compounds on targets, pathways, or phenotypes participating in normal and disease processes. While most cell-based assays measure single quantities, multiplexed assays seek to address these limitations by obtaining multiple simultaneous measurements.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Sensitive simultaneous assessment of multiple signaling pathways within the same cells requires orthogonal reporters that can assay over large dynamic ranges. Luciferases are such genetically encoded candidates due to their sensitivity, versatility, and cost-effectiveness. We expand luciferase multiplexing in post-lysis endpoint luciferase assays from two to six.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF