Bertl A, Bihler H, Kettner C, Slayman C L
Botanisches Institut I, Universität Karlsruhe, Kaiserstrasse 2, D-76128 Karlsruhe, Germany.
Pflugers Arch. 1998 Nov;436(6):999-1013. doi: 10.1007/s004240050735.
Since the mid-1980s, use of the budding yeast, Saccharomyces cerevisiae, for expression of heterologous (foreign) genes and proteins has burgeoned for several major purposes, including facile genetic manipulation, large-scale production of specific proteins, and preliminary functional analysis. Expression of heterologous membrane proteins in yeast has not kept pace with expression of cytoplasmic proteins for two principal reasons: (1) although plant and fungal proteins express and function easily in yeast membranes, animal proteins do not, at least yet; and (2) the yeast plasma membrane is generally regarded as a difficult system to which to apply the standard electrophysiological techniques for detailed functional analysis of membrane proteins. Especially now, since completion of the genome-sequencing project for Saccharomyces, yeast membranes themselves can be seen as an ample source of diverse membrane proteins - including ion channels, pumps, and cotransporters - which lend themselves to electrophysiological analysis, and specifically to patch-clamping. Using some of these native proteins for assay, we report systematic methods to prepare both the yeast plasma membrane and the yeast vacuolar membrane (tonoplast) for patch-clamp experiments. We also describe optimized ambient conditions - such as electrode preparation, buffer solutions, and time regimens - which facilitate efficient patch recording from Saccharomyces membranes. There are two main keys to successful patch-clamping with Saccharomyces. The first is patience; the second is scrupulous cleanliness. Large cells, such as provided by polyploid strains, are also useful in yeast patch recording, especially while the skill required for gigaseal formation is being learned. Cleanliness is aided by (1) osmotic extrusion of protoplasts, after minimal digestion of yeast walls; (2) use of a rather spare suspension of protoplasts in the recording chamber; (3) maintenance of continuous chamber perfusion prior to formation of gigaseals; (4) preparation (pulling and filling) of patch pipettes immediately before use; (5) application of a modest pressure head to the pipette-filling solution before the tip enters the recording bath; (6) optical control for debris at the pipette tip; and (7) discarding of any pipette that does not "work" on the first try at gigaseal formation. Other useful tricks toward gigaseal formation include the making of protoplasts from cells grown aerobically, rather than anaerobically; use of sustained but gentle suction, rather than hard suction; and manipulation of bath temperature and/or osmotic strength. Yeast plasma membranes form gigaseals with difficulty, but these tend to be very stable and allow for long-term cell-attached or whole-cell recording. Yeast tonoplasts form gigaseals with ease, but these tend to be unstable and rarely allow recording for more than 15 min. The difference of stability accrues mainly because of the fact that yeast protoplasts adhere only lightly to the recording chamber and can therefore be lifted away on the patch pipette, whereas yeast vacuoles adhere firmly to the chamber bottom and are subsequently stressed by very slight relative movements of the pipette. With plasma membranes, conversion from cell-attached recording geometry to isolated ISO patch (inside-out) geometry is accomplished by blowing a fine stream of air bubbles across the pipette tip; to whole-cell recording geometry, by combining suction and one high-voltage pulse; and from whole-cell to OSO patch (outside-out) geometry, by sudden acceleration of the bath perfusion stream. With tonoplasts, conversion from the vacuole-attached recording geometry to whole-vacuole geometry is accomplished by application of a large brief voltage pulse; and further conversion to the OSO patch geometry is carried out conventionally, by slow withdrawal of the patch pipette from the vacuole, which usually remains attached to the chamber bottom.
自20世纪80年代中期以来,出于几个主要目的,利用出芽酵母酿酒酵母来表达异源(外源)基因和蛋白质的情况迅速发展,这些目的包括便于进行基因操作、大规模生产特定蛋白质以及进行初步功能分析。酵母中外源膜蛋白的表达未能与胞质蛋白的表达同步,主要有两个原因:(1)尽管植物和真菌蛋白在酵母膜中易于表达并发挥功能,但动物蛋白至少目前还不行;(2)酵母质膜通常被认为是一个难以应用标准电生理技术对膜蛋白进行详细功能分析的系统。特别是现在,自从完成酿酒酵母的基因组测序项目以来,酵母膜本身可被视为多种膜蛋白的丰富来源,包括离子通道、泵和协同转运蛋白,这些蛋白适合进行电生理分析,尤其是膜片钳分析。我们利用其中一些天然蛋白进行检测,报告了用于膜片钳实验制备酵母质膜和酵母液泡膜(液泡膜)的系统方法。我们还描述了优化的环境条件,如电极制备、缓冲溶液和时间方案,这些有助于从酵母膜进行高效的膜片记录。用酿酒酵母成功进行膜片钳实验有两个主要关键。第一个是耐心;第二个是严格保持清洁。大细胞,如多倍体菌株提供的细胞,在酵母膜片记录中也很有用,尤其是在学习形成千兆封接所需技能时。保持清洁有助于:(1)在对酵母细胞壁进行最少消化后通过渗透作用挤出原生质体;(2)在记录室中使用相当稀疏的原生质体悬浮液;(3)在形成千兆封接之前保持记录室的连续灌注;(4)在使用前立即制备(拉制和填充)膜片吸管;(5)在吸管尖端进入记录浴之前对吸管填充溶液施加适度的压力头;(6)对吸管尖端的碎片进行光学控制;(7)丢弃在首次尝试形成千兆封接时“不起作用”的任何吸管。其他有助于形成千兆封接的有用技巧包括从需氧生长而非厌氧生长的细胞制备原生质体;使用持续但轻柔的吸力,而非强力吸力;以及控制浴温或渗透压强度。酵母质膜很难形成千兆封接,但这些封接往往非常稳定,可用于长期的细胞贴附或全细胞记录。酵母液泡膜很容易形成千兆封接,但这些封接往往不稳定,很少能进行超过15分钟的记录。稳定性差异主要是因为酵母原生质体仅轻微附着在记录室上,因此可以用膜片吸管将其提起,而酵母液泡则牢固地附着在室底部,随后会因吸管的非常轻微的相对移动而受到应力。对于质膜,从细胞贴附记录模式转换为分离的ISO膜片(内向外)模式是通过在吸管尖端吹过一股细小的气泡流来实现的;转换为全细胞记录模式是通过结合吸力和一个高压脉冲来实现的;从全细胞模式转换为OSO膜片(外向内)模式是通过突然加速浴灌注流来实现的。对于液泡膜,从液泡贴附记录模式转换为全液泡模式是通过施加一个大的短暂电压脉冲来实现的;进一步转换为OSO膜片模式则按常规进行,即通过将膜片吸管缓慢从液泡中抽出,液泡通常仍附着在室底部。