[No authors listed]
The study of protein-protein interactions is an essential process to understand the biological functions of proteins and the underlying mechanisms. Co-immunoprecipitation coupled with mass spectrometry (CoIP-MS) is one of the most extensively used high-throughput techniques to discover novel protein-protein interactions. However, the traditional CoIP process uses whole cell lysate, disrupts cellular organization, and leads to potential false positives by inducing artificial protein-protein interactions. Here, we have developed a strategy by combining subcellular fractionation with CoIP-MS to study the interacting proteins of the complement component 1, q subcomponent binding protein (C1QBP) in the mitochondria. Using this method, a novel C1QBP interacting protein, dihydrolipoyllysine-residue acetyltransferase component of pyruvate dehydrogenase complex, mitochondrial (DLAT) was identified and validated. Furthermore, the activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) was found to be affected by the expression level of C1QBP. These results provide novel insights regarding the mitochondrial function of C1QBP in the regulation of cellular energy metabolism. This method could also be used to analyze the subcellular protein-protein interactions for other proteins of interest.
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