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Submitted on February 24, 2005
Revised on March 20, 2005
Accepted on March 20, 2005

A combined yeast/bacterial two-hybrid system: development and evaluation

Ilya G. Serebriiskii, Rui Fang, Ekaterina Latypova, Richard Hopkins, Charles Vinson, J. Keith Joung, and Erica A. Golemis

Basic Science, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia 19111

Corresponding Author: ig_serebriiskii{at}fccc.edu

Two-hybrid screening is a standard methodology to identify and characterize protein-protein interactions that has become an integral component of many proteomic investigations. The two-hybrid system was initially developed using yeast as a host organism. However, bacterial two-hybrid systems have also become common laboratory tools and are preferred in some circumstances, although yeast and bacterial two-hybrid systems have never been directly compared. We describe here the development of a unified yeast and bacterial two-hybrid (YBTH) system in which a single bait expression plasmid is used in both organismal milieus. We use a series of leucine zipper fusion proteins of known affinities to compare interaction detection using both systems. While both two-hybrid systems detected interactions within a comparable range of interaction affinities, each demonstrated unique advantages. The yeast system produced quantitative readout over a greater dynamic range than that observed with bacteria. However, the phenomenon of “auto-activation” by baits was less problematic in the bacterial system than in yeast. Both systems identified physiological interactors for a library screen with a cI-Ras test bait; however, non-identical interactors were obtained in yeast and bacterial screens. The ability to rapidly shift between yeast and bacterial systems provided by these new reagents should provide a marked advantage for two-hybrid investigations. In addition, the modified expression vectors should be useful for any application requiring facile expression of a protein of interest in both yeast and bacteria.


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[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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