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Biology

The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP Assay to Study TGF- β1 Mediated Recruitment of miRNA to the RISC in CFBE Cells

Published: July 31, 2020 doi: 10.3791/61571

Abstract

Micro(mi)RNAs are short, non-coding RNAs that mediate the RNA interference (RNAi) by post-transcriptional mechanisms. Specific miRNAs are recruited to the cytoplasmic RNA induced silencing complex (RISC). Argonaute2 (Ago2), an essential component of RISC, facilitates binding of miRNA to the target-site on mRNA, followed by cleaving the miRNA-mRNA duplex with its endonuclease activity. RNAi is mediated by a specific pool of miRNAs recruited to RISC, and thus is referred to as the functional pool. The cellular levels of many miRNAs are affected by the cytokine Transforming Growth Factor-β1 (TGF-β1). However, little is known about whether the TGF-β1 affects the functional pools of these miRNAs. The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay, discussed in this manuscript, is designed to examine effects of TGF-β1 on the recruitment of miRNAs to RISC and it helps to determine whether changes in the cellular miRNA levels correlate with changes in the RISC-associated, functional pools. The general principles of the assay are as follows. Cultured cells treated with TGF-β1 or vehicle control are lysed and the endogenous Ago2 is immunoprecipitated with immobilized anti-Ago2 antibody, and the active miRNAs complexed with Ago2 are isolated with a RISC immunoprecipitation (RIP) assay kit. The miRNAs are identified with quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) using miRNA-specific stem-looped primers during reverse transcription, followed by PCR using miRNA-specific forward and reverse primers, and TaqMan hydrolysis probes.

Introduction

Transforming Growth Factor-β1 (TGF-β1) is a multifunctional cytokine that can change the expression of many micro(mi)RNAs1,2,3. The total cellular level of a particular miRNA does not correlate with its inhibitory potential because only a specific fraction of the miRNA is incorporated into RNA induced silencing complex (RISC) to perform RNA interference (RNAi)3. Only up to 10% of each miRNA is RISC-associated and participates in RNAi4,5. Next, the RNAi process involves binding of the RISC-associated miRNA to the target mRNA recognition sequence(s)6. The RISC association is influenced by the availability of the target mRNA and the miRNA complementarity to the binding site, usually present at 3’ untranslated region (UTR) of the mRNA4. The Argonaute2-miRNA-co-immunoprecipitation (Ago2-miRNA-co-IP) assay, described in this manuscript, is designed to examine the effect of TGF-β1 on the recruitment of specific miRNAs to RISC by detecting differences in the RISC-associated miRNAs after TGF-β1 treatment, compared to the vehicle control. Examining the RISC-associated functional pool of a specific miRNA is much more informative about the miRNA effects than examining the total cellular level of the miRNA. RISC consists of proteins that scan the binding site on the target mRNA and cleave the miRNA-mRNA duplex. Argonaute2 (Ago2) is the main component of RISC. Out of the five Ago isoforms (Ago1-Ago5), Ago2 is the only one that has endonuclease activity and participates in RNAi in human cells7,8,9,10. The Ago2-miRNA-RISC complex is the functional unit for miRNA-mediated post-transcriptional mRNA repression11. The Ago2-associated miRNA represents the native state of miRNA in response to intracellular or extracellular signaling. Thus, immunoprecipitation of the endogenous Ago2 provides an excellent opportunity to detect the active, RISC-associated fraction of a specific miRNA as well as the functional assessment of its targets. This assay is superior to the pull-down of endogenous target mRNA with biotinylated miRNA mimics because of unpredictable efficiency of the cellular uptake of biotinylated nucleic acid molecules and their off-target effects.

The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay, discussed in this manuscript, was optimized to determine the effects of TGF-β1 on RISC recruitment of miRNAs in immortalized human bronchial epithelial CFBE41o- cells3. Components of the RIP assay kit were used to perform Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay with modifications in the protocol provided by the manufacturer. A separation method was used to isolate small and large RNA, in which small RNA was used to quantify miRNA with the help of quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR) using miRNA-specific stem-looped primers during reverse transcription, followed by PCR using miRNA-specific forward and reverse primers, and TaqMan hydrolysis probes.

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Protocol

1. Preparation before experiment

  1. Seeding cells
    1. Prepare 10% collagen I solution in Minimal Essential Medium (MEM) and add 500 µL to each 24 mm cell culture filter in a 6-well plate. Distribute to cover the entire surface of the filter by rotating gently by hand. Incubate filters under the UV light in the laminar flow hood at room temperature for 30 minutes (min), followed by incubation in cell culture incubator at 37 °C for 1 h.
    2. Prepare cell culture medium (MEM gassed with CO2 for 20 min, 10% Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS), 50 U/mL penicillin, 50 U/mL streptomycin, 2 mM L-glutamine, 0.5 μg/mL puromycin).
    3. Bring the collagen-coated filters (step 1.1.1) from the incubator and suction off the excess collagen. Add 1.5 mL of the cell culture medium (step 1.1.2) to the basolateral side and 0.5 mL to the apical side (on to the filter) in the 6-well plate.
    4. Seed 1 x 106 of CFBE41o- cells12 suspended in 500 µL of the cell culture medium. Rotate the plate gently by hand to distribute the cells evenly on the filters and incubate in the cell culture incubator at 37 °C with 5% CO2.
    5. Remove medium from the apical side one day after seeding cells and continue culturing cells in air-liquid-interface (no medium on the apical side). Change the basolateral medium daily and perform the experiment on the 8th day.
  2. Treatment of Cells with TGF-β1 or Vehicle Control
    1. Prepare FBS-free cell culture medium (FBS-free medium): Gas MEM with 5% CO2 for 20 min, add 50 U/mL penicillin, 50 U/mL streptomycin, and 2 mM L-glutamine and filter sterilize the medium.
    2. Prepare vehicle control: Add 20 µL of 1 M HCl and 5 mg of BSA to 5 mL of double distilled water (4 mM HCl with 1 mg/mL BSA) to obtain 1 ng/µL stock solution. Filter sterilize the mixture before use.
    3. Prepare TGF-β1 solution: Reconstitute 1 µg of lyophilized TGF-β1 in 1 mL of sterile-filtered vehicle (4 mM HCl and 1 mg/mL BSA) to obtain 1 ng/µL stock solution. Aliquot in small volumes and store at -20 °C.
    4. Prepare the working concentration of TGF-β1 or vehicle control at 15 ng/mL of FBS-free medium (add 15 µL of the TGF-β1 or vehicle control stock solution per mL of FBS-free medium). Suction off the cell culture medium from the basolateral side and add the TGF-β1 or vehicle control containing medium 24 h before the experiment.
  3. Preparation of buffers for cell lysis and immunoprecipitation
    1. Prepare mi-Lysis buffer (+) for cell lysis. Add 1 tablet of protease inhibitor mini and 15 µL of 1 M DTT per 10 mL of volume into the mi-Lysis buffer provided in the RIP-Assay Kit.
    2. Prepare mi-Wash buffer (+) for washing protein G agarose beads. Add 52.5 µL of 1 M DTT per 35 mL of volume into the mi-Wash buffer provided in the RIP-Assay Kit.
  4. Conjugation of Anti-Ago2 antibody with protein G agarose beads
    1. Wash separately two 30 µL aliquots of protein G agarose bead slurry (50%) by repeating the following procedure three times: add 100 µL of ice-cold PBS, mix gently, centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 1 min, and suction off the supernatant with 200 µL pipette.
    2. Wash the beads once with 100 µL of ice-cold mi-Wash Buffer (+), suction off the supernatant with 200 µL pipette and add 500 µL of mi-Wash Buffer (+) to the beads and mix gently. Keep the tubes on ice.
    3. Add 7.5 µg of mouse monoclonal (IgG2) anti-human EIF2C2 (Ago2) antibody (see Table of Materials) or non-specific mouse IgG2 (negative control) to the protein G beads slurry in the mi-Wash Buffer (+).
    4. Incubate the tubes overnight, rotating at 8 rotations per minute (rpm) in a cold room.

2. Immunoprecipitation of Ago2

  1. Lysis of cells
    1. Bring the plate containing cells cultured on 24 mm filters from the cell culture incubator and quickly transfer the filters to a plate on ice filled with ice-cold PBS. Allow PBS to overflow into the apical side of the filters to cover cells.
    2. One side at a time, suction off PBS and wash the apical and basolateral side with ice-cold PBS twice.
    3. Suction off all PBS, add 300 µL of ice-cold mi-Lysis buffer (+) to the cells, scrape the cells and transfer to 1.5 mL tube marked for respective treatment condition (TGF-β1 or vehicle control).
    4. Add 200 µL of mi-Lysis buffer (+) to each tube and vortex thoroughly.
    5. Incubate the tubes on ice for 15 min.
    6. Centrifuge the tube at 14,000 x g for 10 min at 4 °C, collect the supernatant as the cell lysate, and keep on ice.
  2. Preclearing of cell lysate with unconjugated protein G agarose beads
    1. Wash 30 µL of fresh protein G agarose bead slurry (50%) in a 1.5 mL tube 3 times with 100 µL of PBS (step 1.4.1) and remove excess PBS.
    2. Wash beads with 500 µL of mi-Wash Buffer (+) once, and once with 500 µL of mi-Lysis Buffer (+). Remove the excess buffer.
    3. Add cell lysate from step 2.1.6 to the tubes containing unconjugated protein G beads.
    4. Rotate (8 rpm) the tubes for 1 h in the cold room to preclear the cell lysates.
    5. After preclearing, centrifuge the tubes at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C. Collect the precleared lysate as supernatant in fresh tubes and keep on ice.
    6. Prepare pre-immunoprecipitation whole cell lysate (WCL) for detection of Ago2 protein by western blotting. Take 10 µL of precleared lysates and add 10 µL of sample buffer (with 10% DTT), heat at 85 °C for 4 min, cool down on the bench, and store at -20 °C.
  3. Immunoprecipitation of Ago2 complexes with anti-Ago2 antibody immobilized on protein G agarose beads
    1. Centrifuge the anti-Ago2 antibody conjugated to protein G beads prepared in step 1.4.4 at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C, remove the supernatant and discard. Wash beads once with 500 µL of mi-Lysis Buffer (+), centrifuge as before, and discard the supernatant again.
    2. Mix 500 µL of the precleared cell lysates from step 2.2.6 with anti-Ago2 antibody conjugated with protein G beads and incubate for 3 h rotating (8 rpm) in the cold room.
    3. Bring tubes from cold room on ice to the bench top and centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C. Then remove and discard the supernatant.
    4. Wash the protein G agarose beads with immobilized anti-Ago2 antibody-Ago2 complexes containing the co-immunoprecipitated miRNAs with 1 mL of mi-Wash buffer (+), centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C, and discard the supernatant. Repeat this process twice.
    5. Resuspend the beads with 1 mL of mi-Wash Buffer (+) and take 100 µL of the slurry to a new tube for the post-immunoprecipitation protein samples for western blotting.
    6. Centrifuge the tubes at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C and discard the supernatant.
    7. Add 20 µL of sample buffer (10% DTT), heat for 5 min at 85 °C, mix, and centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 1 min at room temperature. Store samples at -20 °C.
    8. Centrifuge the tubes with the remaining 900 µL of immobilized anti-Ago2 antibody-Ago2 complexes from step 2.3.5 at 2,000 x g for 1 min at 4 °C, suction off and discard the supernatant. Keep the samples on ice.

3. RNA Isolation

  1. Label two 1.5 mL tubes per sample for isolation of small RNA and large RNA in upcoming steps and add 2 µL of mi-solution IV to each tube, to be used in step 3.5 and 3.8.
  2. Prepare the master mix solution by adding 10 µL of mi-solution I and 240 µL of mi-solution II from the RIP-assay kit, per sample, to a 1.5 mL tube and keep the tube at room temperature.
  3. Add 250 µL of the master mix to each tube containing immobilized anti-Ago2 antibody-Ago2 complexes (prepared in step 2.3.8), vortex, and centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 1 min at room temperature.
  4. Add 150 µL of mi-solution III in the same tube and mix well. Then centrifuge at 2,000 x g for 2 min at room temperature. The supernatant at this step contains large RNA in addition to small RNA (i.e., total RNA).
  5. Carefully transfer the supernatant to the tube containing 2 µL of mi-solution IV, prepared in step 3.1. Avoid contaminating the supernatant with beads to interfere with qRT-PCR.
  6. Add 300 µL of ice-cold 2-popanol to each tube containing total RNA, vortex, spin down, and incubate at -20 °C for 2 h for optimal precipitation of large RNA.
  7. After the incubation at -20 °C, centrifuge the samples at 12,000 x g for 10 min at 4 °C to separate the small and large RNAs, contained in the supernatant and pellet, respectively. Keep the pellets on ice until step 3.11.
  8. Transfer the supernatant with small RNAs to the tube prepared in step 3.1 (containing 2 µL of mi-solution IV) and add 500 µL of ice-cold 2-propanol, vortex, and spin down.
  9. Incubate the supernatants overnight at -20 °C for optimal precipitation of small RNAs.
  10. The next day, take out the tubes containing small RNAs from -20 °C freezer and centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 10 min at 4 °C. Aspirate the supernatant, without disturbing the pellet, and wash the pellet containing most of the small RNA following step 3.11.
  11. Rinse the pellet containing large RNA (step 3.7) and small RNA (step 3.10) with 500 µL of ice-cold 70% ethanol, each. Slowly mix the pellet with ice-cold 70% ethanol and then centrifuge at 12,000 x g for 3 min at 4 °C. Carefully aspirate the supernatant, without disturbing the pellet. Repeat the process of washing once again.
  12. Aspirate remaining ethanol with pipette of smaller volumes (10 µL or 20 µL) and allow to air dry for 30 min at room temperature in RNase free environment.
  13. Reconstitute the small RNA and large RNA pellets by adding 50 µL of nuclease free water and heating at 65 °C for 5 min. Then store the RNA at -80 °C till further use after checking the quality and concentration of RNA by nanodrop.

4. Quantification of miRNA by quantitative reverse-transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (qRT-PCR)

  1. cDNA Preparation through Reverse Transcription of miRNA with miRNA Specific Stem-looped Primers
    NOTE: RNA detection by standard qRT-PCR requires a template of at least two times the length of the forward or reverse primer, each approximately 20 nucleotides long. Thus, the minimum length is at least 40 nucleotides, making small RNAs too short for detection. The protocol describes miRNA-specific RT-primers (Table of Materials) containing highly stable stem-loop structure that lengthens the target cDNA. The forward PCR primer adds additional length with nucleotides that optimizes its melting temperature and enhances assay specificity. The reverse primer disrupts the stem loop13. The following protocol describes RT of RNA to cDNA for miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p using the miRNA reverse transcription Kit (Table of Materials).
    1. Prepare a master mix for each miRNA by adding 100 mM dNTPs (0.3 µL), Reverse Transcriptase (2 µL), 10x RT buffer (3 µL), RNase Inhibitor (0.38 µL), miRNA-specific looped primer (6 µL), and nuclease free water (8.32 µL). The combined volume of master mix is 20 µL.
    2. Add 10 µL of small RNA from step 3.13 (50-100 ng) to three separate 200 µL tubes for each cDNA of miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p.
    3. Add the master mix to small RNA, mix gently, and spin to the bottom of tubes. Keep the tubes on ice until loading into the thermal cycler.
    4. Set the program in thermal cycler for single cycle as hold at 16 °C for 30 min, hold at 42 °C for 30 min, hold at 85 °C for 5 min, and hold at 4 °C. Set the reaction volume to 30.0 µL. See step 4.1.6.1.
    5. Load the reaction tubes into the thermal cycler. Start the RT run. See step 4.1.6.2.
    6. Switch ON the thermal cycler and place the tubes into the tray. It will show that “System is booting, please wait”. Click on Browse/New Methods. Save the method and use in another experiment by browsing through the menu. Either select from the list of methods saved before and start run or create “new” method. The “edit run” method or “new” method screen will appear.
      1. Edit temperature and cycles as stated in step 4.1.4. Add or remove stages and steps by clicking on particular stage or step and then clicking on add or delete button. Click on Save or directly run the program. In Save Run Method, name the “run” method, set the reaction volume (30 µL), set cover temperature to 105 °C, save, and exit.
      2. When “browse run method” screen appears, select the saved method from the “run method” list. Click Start Run and again confirm the reaction volume and cover temperature. Click on Start Run Now. The screen will show sample temperature, cover temperature, and time remaining. Record the start and stop time after completion and remove the tubes from the thermal cycler.
        NOTE: The tubes containing cDNA can be stored in -20 °C till their further use for qPCR of miRNA.
  2. qPCR with the miRNA-specific forward/reverse primers and hydrolysis probes
    NOTE: The following protocol is for qPCR of miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p using miRNA-specific cDNAs prepared in step 4.1. The single tube miRNA Assay (20x) contains miRNA specific forward/reverse primers and hydrolysis probe (Table of Materials). The forward primer adds nucleotide to increase length and optimize melting temperature, while the reverse primer disrupts the stem loop of cDNA13. The Universal PCR Master Mix (Table of Materials) provides additional components required for qPCR. The reaction (20 μL) is done in triplicate for each miRNA.
    1. Prepare separate master mix for miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p in triplicates using respective miRNA assay (20x) (1 μL), 2x Universal PCR Master Mix (No AmpErase UNG; 10 μL), and nuclease free water (7.5 μL). The total volume for one reaction is 18.5 μL.
    2. Add miRNA-specific cDNA (1.5 μL) prepared in 4.1 to to each well of the PCR plate in triplicates.
    3. Add the miRNA-specific master mix (18.5 μL) prepared in step 4.2.1 to the wells of PCR plate containing respective cDNA (1.5 μL).
    4. Seal plate with appropriate sealer and run qPCR for 45 cycles on a qPCR thermocycler (Table of Materials). Set cycle temperature as hold at 95 °C for 10 min, followed by 45 repeats of 95 °C for 15 seconds (s) and 60 °C for 60 s. See step 4.2.6.
    5. Set the qPCR curve baselines manually per plate and standardized thresholds for all qPCR runs at a point at which amplification becomes logarithmic for all samples.
    6. Switch ON the thermal cycler and place the PCR plate into the tray. The thermal cycler machine operates with the software installed on the accompanying computer. Click on the icon of the system software.
      1. Click on Create New Document or Open Existing Document (if there is a previously saved document). New document wizard will appear. The assay will be “standard curve (Absolute quantification)”. Click on Next.
      2. Add a new detector. Name the detector as miR-143, miR-145, and miR-154 one by one by clicking Create Another. Select reporter dye as “FAM” for all, and click Okay. Then find the name as miR-143, miR-145, and miR-154 and add them into detector’s document by clicking Add. Then click Next.
      3. “Set up sample plate” will appear. Select the wells for a detector and then click on Use to select the corresponding detector. Then click on Finish. The system initializing will appear.
      4. Go to the Instrument and set stage, temperature and time as mentioned in step 4.2.4. Set the sample volume to 20 μL. Then start the run by clicking Start. Then save the plate with a name in a desired location. The estimated time will show on the screen near the start button. Note down the time.
      5. After completion, go to File | Export | Results, and save results as CT values in desired location. The CT values will be in .csv files. Open it and copy the values into a spreadsheet file.
    7. Subtract average of triplicate threshold cycle (Ct) of the vehicle control-treated samples from average Ct of TGF-β1-treated samples to calculate ΔCt. Finally, calculate fold change (FC) of miRNA levels using formula 2-ΔCt. The log2 transformation of the FC value can be used for graphical representation.

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Representative Results

We have previously shown that TGF-β1 increased the total cellular levels of miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p miRNAs in CFBE41o- cells3. Next, we employed the Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay to elucidate the functional effects of TGF-β1 on these miRNAs. The RISC recruitment of miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p was studied in CFBE41o- cells stably expressing the wild type (WT)-cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) or mutant CFTR with the deletion of phenylalanine at 508 position (F508del)-CFTR14,15. The air-liquid interface cultures of WT- or F508del-CFBE41o- cells were treated with TGF-β1 or vehicle for 24 h. Cells were lysed and endogenous Ago2 was immunoprecipitated and detected by western blotting with the primary mouse monoclonal anti-Ago2 antibody at 1:3000 dilution followed by anti-mouse horseradish peroxidase secondary antibody. The quantification of Ago2 immunoprecipitation was performed by densitometry using ImageJ with exposures within the linear dynamic range of the film. The abundance of immunoprecipitated Ago2 was calculated after subtracting the background and normalizing to WCL Ago2. The co-immunoprecipitation of miR-145-5p, miR-143-5p, and miR-154-5p with Ago2 was detected by qRT-PCR using miRNA-specific stem-looped primers for cDNA preparation, followed by the PCR with the miRNA-specific forward and reverse primers, and TaqMan hydrolysis probes. The means between the groups were calculated by two-tailed student t-test. Data are presented as mean ± S.E.M. The Ago2 protein abundance and its immunoprecipitation efficiency were similar in TGF-β1 or vehicle treated cell lines (Figure 1A–1C). miR-145-5p and miR-143-5p were present in the complexes co-immunoprecipitated with Ago2 in the WT- and F508del-CFTR expressing cells (Figure 1D-1E). TGF-β1 increased co-immunoprecipitation of miR-145-5p and miR-143-5p with Ago2 in both cell lines, compared to vehicle control. miR-154-5p co-immunoprecipitated with Ago2 but TGF-β1 did not affect the abundance of the active miR-154-5p pool, compared to vehicle control (Figure 1F). Taken together, the above results demonstrate that TGF-β1 can increase the total cellular miRNA level without affecting its functional pool. The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay increased our understanding of the distinct effects of TGF-β1 on miRNAs.

Figure 1
Figure 1. Summary of the Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay showing that TGF-β1 mediated selective recruitment of specific miRNAs to RISC in WT- and F508del-CFBE41o- cells. (A) Endogenous Ago2 was immunoprecipitated (IP) from whole cell lysates (WCL) of CFBE41o- cells expressing either WT- or F508del-CFTR with the anti-Ago2 antibody or non-immune IgG2 (a negative control) and detected by western blotting (WB). Shown are representative WB from WT-CFTR expressing cells. The non-specific band in IP samples is marked with an asterisk. Representative WB images (B) and summary of data (C) showing that TGF-β1 had no effect on the Ago2 abundance in WCL and did not change the efficiency of Ago2 IP. (D-F) qRT-PCR data showing the co-IP of miRNAs with endogenous Ago2. The Ct values of miR-145 (miR-145-5p) in vehicle-treated cells were subtracted from the Ct values of miR-145 in TGF-β1-treated cells to generate ΔCts. The fold change (FC) in miR-145 level between samples was determined using the equation 2−ΔCt and expressed as Log2 FC versus vehicle. TGF-β1 increased the miR-145 (D) and miR-143 (miR-143-5p) (E) co-IP with Ago2 in WT- and F508del-CFBE41o- cells and did not affect the co-IP of miR-154 (miR-154-5p) (F). Error bars, S.E.M. N = 10/group. * p < 0.05. (This is a representative figure adapted from a previously published manuscript3). Please click here to view a larger version of this figure.

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Discussion

The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay is designed to investigate the active pool of miRNAs in response to TGF-β1 treatment. The active or RISC-associated miRNAs are important to understand their inhibitory potential for the target mRNA4. Panshin et al. recently showed that the immunoprecipitation efficiency of Ago2 and miRNAs may depend on the protocol16. There are several differences between the protocol here and the above published data. The protocol here was optimized for CFBE41o- cells. By contrast, Panshin et al. studied Ago2 IP in human plasma or HEK293 cells. We immunoprecipitated Ago2 with mouse monoclonal, anti-human Ago2 antibody, subclass IgG2, conjugated with protein G agarose beads. Panshin et al. used polyclonal anti-Ago2 antibody conjugated with protein A agarose beads, which can induce variability between immunoprecipitated miRNA pools16. The Protein A beads do not bind to all human IgG subclasses as efficiently as Protein G17. We controlled for the IgG2 subclass of the anti-Ago2 antibody by using the non-specific IgG2 negative control. Using the same IP protocol, we examined the TGF-β1 effects on the RISC-associated miRNA pool.

We introduced several modifications to the RIP assay kit to optimize the immunoprecipitation and RNA isolation to study the TGF-β1 induced RISC recruitment of miRNAs. First, we used a larger volume of PBS for complete washing of protein G agarose bead. Second, we reduced the amount of anti-Ago2 antibody and the wash buffer by 50% to reduce the cost. Third, we performed all steps at unified cold temperature and added cold lysis buffer directly on the cells. Fourth, we have not isolated pre-immunoprecipitation RNA for miRNA quantification because we already published the data on miRNA expression in whole cell lysate of CFBE41o- cells3. Other methods, such as the magnetic beads-based RNA binding protein immunoprecipitation can be used to examine the mRNA. However, the magnetic bead-based methods can not specifically target the component of RISC and thus may not be appropriate to evaluate active pool of miRNAs.

We would like to highlight several conditions critical to the success of the Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay. The efficient conjugation of the anti-Ago2 antibody with the protein G agarose beads is the first critical step. Next, the efficient pull-down of Ago2 from WCL with the immobilized anti-Ago2 antibody is the next step. Lysed cells contain debris, which should be efficiently removed through centrifugation to prevent interference with the Ago2 pull-down. Care must be taken while collecting the supernatant containing cell lysate so that the pellet containing cellular debris would not dislodge and mix with the supernatant. The pre-clearing step prior to immunoprecipitation is also necessary to remove any non-specific binding of proteins to the empty beads (beads not conjugated with the antibody). The choice of pre-immunoprecipitation RNA isolation should be determined according to the experiment. The isolation of pre-immunoprecipitation RNA was omitted and here we examined the effect of TGF-β1 on the RISC recruitment of miRNAs. The co-immunoprecipitated miRNA FC after treatment with TGF-β1 versus vehicle control provides compelling evidence for the TGF-β1 recruitment of miRNAs to RISC. The working temperature has a crucial role and all steps during the immunoprecipitation of Ago2 must be performed on ice or at 4 °C to avoid degradation or denaturation of RISC associated proteins and RNA. All further steps involving elution of RNA from beads must be performed at similar temperature because the activity of RNase, an enzyme ubiquitous and responsible for rapid RNA degradation, is optimal at room temperature. The use of RNase free environment, including equipment, tips, tubes, pipettes, and bench top is highly recommended. Wearing the RNase free, powder free nitrile gloves, changed frequently, should be practiced during every step. It is recommended to immediately store RNA at -80 °C after elution. The contamination with agarose beads can cause problems during cDNA preparation and may affect the relative quantification of miRNA or mRNA during qRT-PCR. The cell culture requires special attention and should be monitored carefully. The tissue culture dishes should be coated with collagen to increase cell adherence and promote epithelial cell differentiation. We performed the Ago2-miRNA-co-IP assay in the CFBE41o- cell model.

The limitation of the protocol is that it is very sensitive to variation in the number of cells used. The cell number must be precisely controlled and the Ago2 immunoprecipitation has to be optimized according to the cell input to prevent saturation of the immunoprecipitated Ago2 with miRNAs. In the future, the assay could be applicable in several experimental settings, such as gene knockdown and to examine active pool of miRNAs in different disease models. The assay can be optimized for use with other epithelial and non-epithelial cell models, including primary cells or animal models.

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Disclosures

The authors declare that, they have no competing financial interest, and they have nothing to disclose.

Acknowledgments

We thank John Wakefield from Tranzyme, Inc. (Birmingham, AL) who generated the CFBE41o- cells, and J.P. Clancy from the CFFT who provided the cells. This research was funded by the National Institutes of Health grants R01HL144539 and R56HL127202 (to A.S.-U.), and the Cystic Fibrosis Foundation grant SWIATE18G0.

Materials

Name Company Catalog Number Comments
100 mM dNTPs (with dTTPs) Applied Biosystems 4366596
10x Reverse Transcription Buffer (RT Buffer) Applied Biosystems 4366596
2-propanol Fisher BioReagents BP2618-1
2x Laemmli Sample Buffer Bio-Rad 1610737
7300 Real Time PCR System Applied Biosystems 4345240
Anti-Ago2 antibody (anti-EIF2C2), mouse monoclonal against human Ago2 Medical & Biological Laboratories Co. Ltd RN003M
Bovine Albumin Fraction V (7.5% solution) Thermo Scientific 15260037
Collagen I (Purecol-Type I Bovie collagen solution) Advanced Biometrix 50005-100mL
DL-Dithiothreitol (DTT) Sigma 646563-.5ML
DTT Sigma-Aldrich 646563
Ethanol Deacon Laboratories 64175
Fetal Bovine Serum ATLANTA Biologicals S10350
Goat Anti-Mouse IgG Bio-Rad 1706516
L-glutamine (200 mM Solution; 29.20 mg/mL) Corning 25-005-Cl
Mini cell scrapers United Biosystems Thermo Fisher MCS-200
Minimal Essential Medium Thermo Fisher Scientific 11095-080
miRNA specific stem looped RT primers Applied Biosystems 4427975
Mouse IgG2 control Dako, Glostrup, Denmark A0424
MultiScribe Reverse Transcriptase, 50 U/µL Applied Biosystems 4366596
Nano Drop ND-1000 Spectrophotometer NanoDrop Technologies, Inc. E112352
Nuclease-free water Ambion AM9937
Opti-MEM (1x) Reduced Serum Medium Gibco by Life Technologies 11058-021
PBS Gibco 14190250
Penicillin-streptomycin, Sterile Sigma-Aldrich P0781
Pierce Protease Inhibitor Tablets, EDTA-Free Thermo Scientific A32955
Protein G agarose beads (Pierce Protein G Plus Agarose) Thermo Scientific 22851
Puromycin InvivoGen ant-pr-1
RiboCluster Profiler RIP-Assay Kit for microRNA Medical & Biological Laboratories Co. Ltd RN1005
RNase Inhibitor, 20 U/µL Applied Biosystems 4366596
TaqMan 2x Universal PCR master mix without AmpErase UNG Applied Biosystems 4427975
TaqMan miRNA single tube Assay (20x) containing miRNA specific forward/reverse primers and probe Applied Biosystems 4427975 (assay ID #002278, #002146, and #000477)
TGF-beta1 Sigma T1654
Transwell filters (24 mm) Corning Life Sciences Plastic 3412
Veriti 96 Well Thermal Cycler (Model:9902) Applied Biosystems 4375786

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References

  1. Boguslawska, J., Kryst, P., Poletajew, S., Piekielko-Witkowska, A. TGF-beta and microRNA Interplay in Genitourinary Cancers. Cells. 8 (12), (2019).
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  3. Mitash, N., et al. Transforming Growth Factor-beta1 Selectively Recruits microRNAs to the RNA-Induced Silencing Complex and Degrades CFTR mRNA under Permissive Conditions in Human Bronchial Epithelial Cells. International Journal of Molecular Sciences. 20 (19), (2019).
  4. Flores, O., Kennedy, E. M., Skalsky, R. L., Cullen, B. R. Differential RISC association of endogenous human microRNAs predicts their inhibitory potential. Nucleic Acids Research. 42 (7), 4629-4639 (2014).
  5. Janas, M. M., et al. Alternative RISC assembly: binding and repression of microRNA-mRNA duplexes by human Ago proteins. RNA. 18 (11), 2041-2055 (2012).
  6. Wilczynska, A., Bushell, M. The complexity of miRNA-mediated repression. Cell Death & Differentiation. 22 (1), 22-33 (2015).
  7. Peters, L., Meister, G. Argonaute proteins: mediators of RNA silencing. Molecular Cell. 26 (5), 611-623 (2007).
  8. Tolia, N. H., Joshua-Tor, L. Slicer and the argonautes. Nature Chemical Biology. 3 (1), 36-43 (2007).
  9. Liu, J., et al. Argonaute2 is the catalytic engine of mammalian RNAi. Science. 305 (5689), 1437-1441 (2004).
  10. Meister, G., et al. Human Argonaute2 mediates RNA cleavage targeted by miRNAs and siRNAs. Molecular Cell. 15 (2), 185-197 (2004).
  11. Bartel, D. P. MicroRNAs: target recognition and regulatory functions. Cell. 136 (2), 215-233 (2009).
  12. Bebok, Z., et al. Failure of cAMP agonists to activate rescued deltaF508 CFTR in CFBE41o- airway epithelial monolayers. Journal of Physiology. 569, Pt 2 601-615 (2005).
  13. Kramer, M. F. Stem-loop RT-qPCR for miRNAs. Current Protocols in Molecular Biology. , Chapter 15 Unnit 15.10 (2011).
  14. Swiatecka-Urban, A., et al. The short apical membrane half-life of rescued {Delta}F508-cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) results from accelerated endocytosis of {Delta}F508-CFTR in polarized human airway epithelial cells. Journal of Biological Chemistry. 280 (44), 36762-36772 (2005).
  15. Hentchel-Franks, K., et al. Activation of airway cl- secretion in human subjects by adenosine. American Journal of Respiratory Cell and Molecular Biology. 31 (2), 140-146 (2004).
  16. Panshin, D. D., Kondratov, K. A. The Efficiency of Immunoprecipitation of microRNA/Ago2 Complexes from Human Blood Plasma Is Protocol Dependent. Molekuliarnaia Biologiia. 54 (2), 244-251 (2020).
  17. Akerström, B., Brodin, T., Reis, K., Björck, L. Protein G: a powerful tool for binding and detection of monoclonal and polyclonal antibodies. Journal of Immunology. 135 (4), 2589-2592 (1985).

Tags

Ago2-miRNA-co-IP Assay TGF-β1 Recruitment Of MiRNA To RISC CFBE Cells MiRNAs RNA Interference Post-transcriptional Mechanisms Cytoplasmic RNA Induced Silencing Complex (RISC) Argonaute2 (Ago2) Endonuclease Activity Functional Pool Of MiRNAs Transforming Growth Factor-β1 (TGF-β1) Cellular MiRNA Levels RISC-associated Functional Pools Immunoprecipitation RIP Assay Kit Quantitative Reverse-transcriptase Polymerase Chain Reaction (qRT-PCR)
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Mitash, N., Donovan, J. E.,More

Mitash, N., Donovan, J. E., Swiatecka-Urban, A. The Ago2-miRNA-co-IP Assay to Study TGF- β1 Mediated Recruitment of miRNA to the RISC in CFBE Cells. J. Vis. Exp. (161), e61571, doi:10.3791/61571 (2020).

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