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- Title
The importance of complete tissue homogenization for accurate stoichiometric measurement of myosin light chain phosphorylation in airway smooth muscle<sup>1</sup>.
- Authors
Paré, Peter D.; Wang, Lu; Seow, Chun Y.
- Abstract
The standard method for measuring the phosphorylation of the regulatory myosin light chain (MLC20) in smooth muscle is extraction of the light chain using a urea extraction buffer, urea-glycerol gel electrophoresis of the soluble portion of the extract (supernatant) and Western blot analysis. The undissolved portion of the tissue during extraction (the pellet) is usually discarded. Because the pellet contains a finite amount of MLC20, omission of the pellet could result in inaccurate measurement of MLC20 phosphorylation. In this study we compared the level of tracheal smooth muscle MLC20 phosphorylation in the supernatant alone, with that in the complete tissue homogenate (supernatant and pellet) using the standard method. The supernatant fraction showed the well-known double bands representing phosphorylated and un-phosphorylated MLC20. The dissolved pellet fraction showed varying amounts of un-phosphorylated and phosphorylated MLC20. There was a small but statistically significant overestimation of the percent MLC20 phosphorylation if the pellet was not taken into consideration. The overestimation was 7% ± 2% (mean ± SEM) ( p < 0.05) in unstimulated muscle and 2% ± 1% ( p < 0.05) in acetylcholine (10−6 mol/L) stimulated muscle. This finding suggests that for accurate estimation of the stoichiometry of MLC20 phosphorylation it is necessary to consider the contribution from the pellet portion of the muscle tissue homogenate.
- Subjects
SMOOTH muscle; PHOSPHORYLATION; ASYMPTOTIC homogenization; MYOSIN light chain kinase; GEL electrophoresis; WESTERN immunoblotting
- Publication
Canadian Journal of Physiology & Pharmacology, 2015, Vol 93, Issue 2, p155
- ISSN
0008-4212
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1139/cjpp-2014-0357