News Release

CSH Protocols publishes cutting-edge methods for analyzing complex molecular interactions

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Cold Spring Harbor, N.Y., Tues., Oct. 3, 2006 -- With the genomes of hundreds of organisms now catalogued, one of the next major challenges is to identify proteins and their interactions. The current issue of CSH Protocols, published online (www.cshprotocols.org), features two freely available, cutting-edge methods that address this challenge.

Elucidation of protein-DNA interactions has been a tedious process, limited to one protein-interaction partner at a time. But the advent of high-throughput, genomics-based technologies has enabled scientists to build large-scale maps of protein-DNA and protein-protein interactions. These methods--released in CSH Protocols--will be useful to researchers seeking to map these interactions and better understand fundamental biological processes.

One of the freely accessible protocols, developed by Dr. Marian Walhout and her colleagues at the University of Massachusetts Medical School, describes a means for identifying protein-DNA interactions in complex organisms. Her team has used this method to generate a protein-DNA interaction network by characterizing the DNA sequences to which proteins bind in the model organism C. elegans (the "worm" used in many developmental studies). Because it relies on basic molecular biology techniques, this method will also be useful for analyzing the intricately coordinated patterns of gene regulation in other species.

Another technical challenge facing researchers is that in a typical cell, proteins are present in relatively small quantities. The second free method in this release of CSH Protocols is "MuDPIT" (for Multidimensional Protein Identification Technology), a means of identifying rare proteins in complex mixtures. This method combines advanced protein identification technologies with computational analysis, and has already been successfully employed in characterizing interacting proteins in yeast.

These methods are among more than 40 new peer-reviewed protocols added to the CSH Protocols database this month. Launched in May of 2006, CSH Protocols now includes more than 700 protocols spanning many fields in cell and molecular biology.

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ABOUT COLD SPRING HARBOR PROTOCOLS: CSH Protocols (www.cshprotocols.org) is an online resource of methods used in a wide range of biology laboratories. It is structured as an interactive database, with each protocol cross-linked to related methods, descriptive information panels, and illustrative material to maximize the total information available to investigators. Each protocol is clearly presented and designed for easy use at the bench--complete with reagents, equipment, and recipe lists. Life science researchers can access the entire collection via institutional site licenses, and can add their suggestions and comments to further refine the techniques.

ABOUT COLD SPRING HARBOR LABORATORY PRESS: Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press is an internationally renowned publisher of books, journals, and electronic media, located on Long Island, New York. It is a division of Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, an innovator in life science research and the education of scientists, students, and the public. For more information, visit www.cshlpress.com.


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