Analysis of the bioactivity of magnetically immunoisolated peroxisomes

Yaohua Wang, Thane H. Taylor, Edgar A. Arriaga

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

11 Scopus citations

Abstract

Peroxisomes produce reactive oxygen species which may participate in biotransformations of innate biomolecules and xenobiotics. Isolating functional peroxisomes with low levels of contaminants would be a useful tool to investigate biotransformations occurring in these organelles that are usually confounded with biotransformations occurring in other co-isolated organelles. Here, we immunoisolate peroxisomes and demonstrate that the impurity level after isolation is low and that peroxisomes retain their biological activity. In this method, an antibody targeting a 70-kDa peroxisomal membrane protein was immobilized to silanized magnetic iron oxide beads (1-4 μm in diameter) coated with Protein A. Peroxisomes from L6 rat myoblast homogenates were magnetically captured, washed, and then analyzed for subcellular composition using enzymatic assays. Based on the ratio of peroxisomal to lysosomal activity, the retained fraction is 70-fold enriched relative to the unretained fraction. Similarly, the ratio of peroxisomal activity to mitochondrial content suggests that the retained fraction is >30-fold enriched relative to the unretained fraction. H 2O 2 production from the β-oxidation of palmitoyl-CoA demonstrated that the isolated peroxisomal fraction was biologically active. Capillary electrophoresis with laser-induced fluorescence detection (CE-LIF) analysis confirmed that the immunopurified fractions were capable of transforming the anticancer drug doxorubicin and the fatty acid analog, BODIPY 500/510 C1C12. Besides its use to investigate peroxisome biotransformations in health and disease, the combination of magnetic immunoisolation with CE-LIF could be widely applicable to investigate subcellular-specific biotransformations of xenobiotics occurring at immunoisolated subcellular compartments. [Figure not available: see fulltext.]

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)41-49
Number of pages9
JournalAnalytical and Bioanalytical Chemistry
Volume402
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2012

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
Acknowledgments YW acknowledges support through a 2008–2009 Merck Research Laboratories Fellowship in Analytical/Physical Chemistry. THT acknowledges support from NIH grant T32GM008700. EAA acknowledges support from NIH grant AG020866.

Keywords

  • Doxorubicin
  • Fatty acid
  • Fluorescence
  • LIF
  • MEKC
  • Magnetic
  • Peroxisome

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