Published: Vol 6, Iss 4, Feb 20, 2016 DOI: 10.21769/BioProtoc.1739 Views: 8051
Reviewed by: Ralph BottcherVaibhav B ShahAnonymous reviewer(s)
Protocol Collections
Comprehensive collections of detailed, peer-reviewed protocols focusing on specific topics
Related protocols
Puromycin Proximity Ligation Assay (Puro-PLA) to Assess Local Translation in Axons From Human Neurons
Raffaella De Pace [...] Saikat Ghosh
Mar 5, 2025 1524 Views
Optimizing Confocal Imaging Protocols for Muscle Fiber Typing in the Mouse Masseter Muscle
Catalina Matias [...] Jeffrey J. Brault
Apr 5, 2025 1822 Views
Development of a Novel Automated Workflow in Fiji ImageJ for Batch Analysis of Confocal Imaging Data to Quantify Protein Colocalization Using Manders Coefficient
Vikram Aditya [...] Wei Yue
Apr 5, 2025 1498 Views
Abstract
Transmembrane proteins are rarely exclusively localized to a specific vesicle or an organelle. Most transmembrane proteins undergo complicated trafficking routes. Thus, transmembrane proteins are under constant flux, and at steady state, found on a variety of vesicles or organelles. This characteristic makes the study of their trafficking routes complex, since at any given moment, different molecules are often being trafficked in opposing directions. Pulse-chase experiments can temporally track a specific pool of a transmembrane protein of interest, allowing for the kinetic description of its trafficking route. This type of technique has been used extensively to follow a large array of plasma membrane localized proteins (Diril et al., 2006; Jean et al., 2010). Here, we describe a method that allows the study of VAMP8 trafficking from the plasma membrane to endolysosomal compartments. This method was used to describe a role for MTMR13 and RAB21 in the regulation of VAMP8 trafficking to endolysosomes (Jean et al., 2015).
Keywords: Membrane traffickingMaterials and Reagents
Equipment
Procedure
Recipes
Acknowledgments
The uptake assay was adapted from the previously published study (Miller et al., 2011) and was performed in (Jean et al., 2015). The immunofluorescence protocol was adapted from Cell Signaling Technology, http://www.cellsignal.com/common/content/content.jsp?id=if. This work was supported by FRSQ, AHA and CRS postdoctoral fellowships to SJ, and NIH RO1 GM078176 and support from the SDCSB NIH P50 GM085764 to AAK.
References
Article Information
Copyright
© 2016 The Authors; exclusive licensee Bio-protocol LLC.
How to cite
Readers should cite both the Bio-protocol article and the original research article where this protocol was used:
Category
Cell Biology > Cell-based analysis > Transport
Cell Biology > Cell imaging > Confocal microscopy
Do you have any questions about this protocol?
Post your question to gather feedback from the community. We will also invite the authors of this article to respond.
Tips for asking effective questions
+ Description
Write a detailed description. Include all information that will help others answer your question including experimental processes, conditions, and relevant images.
Share
Bluesky
X
Copy link