TurboID chemically “tags” proteins, “basically like adding a zip code,” says Ramelow. This chemical signature allows researchers to isolate proteins. But the researchers also noticed that TurboID tagged proteins that interact with RNA, opening the possibility of also getting information on RNA in the process—something that, if it worked, could make molecular profiling more efficient.
To test TurboID, the researchers used the enzyme to generate proteomes and transcriptomes (the complete sets of RNA in a cell) of a well-studied cell line. They then compared the list generated by their method to the existing map of proteins and RNA found in the cell line. The list matched, suggesting that TurboID could work.
Next, the team needed to see how TurboID would perform in a living brain. To do this, they genetically altered mice to express TurboID in either neurons or another type of brain cell called astrocytes. The technique captured RNA and protein profiles in both cell types.
These results suggest that the technique—dubbed Simultaneous Protein and RNA-Omics, or SPARO—can be used to look at the molecular profiles of brain cells, as well as cells in other parts of the body, says Rangaraju.
There’s also reason to think that the proteome produced by SPARO may be more accurate than other profiling techniques. In a living brain, cells are constantly communicating. Their protein levels should reflect these interactions, but extraction can damage or alter their communications. This technique should provide a better snapshot of brain cells as they are in their natural environment, says Ramelow.
The team expects to use SPARO in their own research. But the technique can also be used in neuroscience more broadly, and even beyond. The molecular profile of cells is one of biology’s “fundamental questions,” says Ramelow. “There’s so much to learn by applying this method very broadly in the field.”