The intrinsically disordered regions of the proteome are enriched in short linear motifs (SLiMs) that serve as binding sites for peptide binding proteins. These interactions are often of low-to-mid micromolar… Click to show full abstract
The intrinsically disordered regions of the proteome are enriched in short linear motifs (SLiMs) that serve as binding sites for peptide binding proteins. These interactions are often of low-to-mid micromolar affinities and are challenging to screen for experimentally. However, a range of dedicated methods have been developed recently, which open for screening of SLiM-based interactions on large scale. A variant of phage display, termed proteomic peptide phage display (ProP-PD), has proven particularly useful for the purpose. Here, we describe a complete high-throughput ProP-PD protocol for screening intrinsically disordered regions for SLiMs. The protocol requires some basic bioinformatics skills for the design of the library and for data analysis but can be performed in a standard biochemistry lab. The protocol starts from the construction of a library, followed by the high-throughput expression and purification of bait proteins, the phage selection, and the analysis of the binding-enriched phage pools using next-generation sequencing. As the protocol generates rather large data sets, we also emphasize the importance of data management and storage.
               
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