Title: Protein Purification
1Protein Purification
- Before any particular protein can be sequenced
and characterized, its is necessary to separate
it from all of the other proteins in the cell. - This purification process involves separating
proteins based on their ionic properties, their
sizes, their hydrophobicity, and their affinities
for certain molecules (ligands). Each successive
step is referred to as fractionation. - Typically some form of column chromatography is
employed, in which the solid phase (stationary
phase) contains molecules that in some way
exploit the differences among various proteins.
2Ion-Exchange Chromatography
- This procedure is very similar to the procedure
that we talked about for separating amino acids
based on charge. - The picture at the left represents ion-exchange
chromatography on a cation exchanger. Notice
that the bead is negatively charged, and
therefore the rate of mobility of proteins loaded
onto the resin is proportional to the degree of
negative charge that they bear. -
3Size Exclusion Chromatography
- In size-exclusion chromatography
(gel-filtration chromatography), proteins migrate
as a function of their molecular weights. - The solid matrix (beads) contains pores of
various sizes. The probability of entering the
pores of the matrix is inversely proportional to
the size of the protein. In fact proteins that
are larger than a given size (depending on the
resin that is used) are totally excluded from
entering the beads. Therefore, larger proteins
have a more direct route to the bottom of the
column, by simply going around all of the beads
rather than entering the beads. - Notice in the figure at left that the large
molecules elute first. - Size-exclusion chromatography can be used to
determine the molecular weight of a particular
protein if appropriate standards are available.
As well see in a couple of slides, the elution
volume is inversely proportional to the log of
the molecular weight.
4Affinity Chromatrography
- In affinity chromatography, proteins are
separated according to their ability to bind to a
specific ligand that is connected to the beads of
the resin. - After the proteins that do not bind the ligand
are washed through the column, the bound protein
of interest is eluted by a solution containing
free ligand.
5Salting Out
- The first step in purifying a protein is
establishing a crude extract. This requires
that the membrane of the cell be ruptured by some
technique. - Upon rupturing the membrane and releasing the
contents of the cell, the insoluble debris is
removed by centrifugation. - Typically, one of the initial steps involves
purifying proteins based on their solubilties in
varying concentrations of ammonium sulfate. The
solubility of a protein is sensitive to the
concentrations of dissolved salts. The
solubility of a protein at low ionic strength
generally increases with the salt concentration
(salting in). At high ionic strength, the
solubilities of proteins decreases (salting out). - Many unwanted proteins can be eliminated by
adjusting the salt concentration in a solution
containing the crude extract to just below the
precipitation point of the protein to be
purified. In this case the protein to be
purified remains in solution, while many others
are precipitated. Likewise, unwanted proteins
can be eliminated by adjusting the salt
concentration to just over the precipitation
point of the protein of interest. In this case,
the protein of interest will be precipitated
while many others will remain in solution.
6Specific Activity
- In order to purify a protein or any other
substance, there must be a means of
quantitatively detecting its presence. - Therefore, an assay must be determined.
Typically assays are based on the function of a
protein. For example, a substrate like shown
below might be used for an enzyme that cleaves an
ester bond (esterase). One of the products of
this reaction has an intense absorption at 412
nm, which would allow for the detection of the
enzyme. - You would be interested in how fast the enzyme
cleaves this molecule (rate of color
development), and how much protein is being added
to the reaction mixture. Your specific activity
would be the rate divided by the total amount of
protein. The higher the specific activity the
more pure your protein.
Intense absorption at 412 nm (yellow)
Esterase
7Hypothetical Purification
8Electrophoresis
Electrophoresis is based on the migration of
proteins in a charged field. The force moving
the macromolecules is the electrical potential,
E. µ V/E, where µ is the electrophoretic
mobility, and V is the velocity of the
particle. µ Z/f, where Z is the net charge of
the molecule, and f is the frictional
coefficient. f is related to the the shape of the
molecule, as well as its size. Typically, the
cross-linked polymer, polyacrylamide acts as the
solid support. Normally, proteins would be
separated in proportion to their charge-to mass
ratio. The problem is that some proteins would
migrate towards the anode, while others would
migrate toward the cathode and, the migration
would not reflect size, but charge to mass. The
trick is to carry out the electrophoresis in the
presence of sodium docecyl sulfate, which is a
detergent. SDS binds to every protein in roughly
the same proportion, which is about one molecule
for every two amino acid residues. SDS carries
with it a negative charge, and the cumulative
negative charge renders the intrinsic net charge
of the protein insiginificant. Therefore, every
protein will have the same charge to mass ratio,
which will cause all proteins to migrate towards
the cathode with a rathe that is dependent on
their sizes. In contrast to gel-filtration,
smaller molecules migrate faster than larger
molecules Typically, this technique is not used
to purify proteins, because SDS normally
denatures proteins. It is used to analyze the
purity of proteins.
9Molecular Weight Determination
Shown above (on the left) is an
SDS-polyacrylamide gel that has been stained with
a dye in order to view the proteins. Lane one of
the left figure represents a set of standards,
while lane 2 represents a protein that has been
purified. The molecular weight Mr of the protein
can be estimated, by comparing its relative
migration to that of the standards. The relation
is that the relative migration is dependent on
the log of the molecular weight.
10Isoelectric Focusing
Isoelectric focusing is a procedure that will
allow the pI of a particular protein to be
determined, and that will separate proteins based
on their respective pIs. In this technique, a
mixture of proteins is applied to a gel that
contains a pH gradient. At the point along the
gradient wherein the protein is no longer
charged, it will cease to migrate. This point is
the pI of the protein, or the isoelectric point.
112D-Electrophoresis
2D-electrophoresis allows separation of proteins
by both size and isoelectric point. Each spot
represents a different protein. The horizontal
represents the isoelectric focusing direction,
while the veritcal represents the SDS PAGE
direction.
12What Can You Get from Sequence Information?
13Homologous Proteins are Related by Primary
Sequence
- Homologous proteins are proteins from different
species that are evolutionarily related as
determined by their primary structures (sequence
of amino acids). - Proteins that are highly homologous usually
perform the same reaction in the corresponding
organisms, and usually have very similar
three-dimensional structures. - Homologous proteins from different species may
have polypeptide chains that are identical or
nearly identical in length. - Many positions in the amino acid sequence are
occupied by the same residue in all species.
These are called invariant residues. - Positions that show considerable variation in the
amino acid residue from one species to another
are called variable residues. - Below is a pseudo amino acid sequence alignment
of the protein cytochrome C. The top line
represents the human protein. Amino acids in
yellow are those that are invariant across
species. Those in blue indicate conservative
substitutions.
14Lipoyl Synthase Sequence Alignment
Motif III
Motif II
Motif I
CYRXCXFCXV
TKXXXMXGXGE
VCXEAXCXNXXEC
15Protein Homology Among Species
- Variable amino acids can provide information
concerning the phylogenetic (evolutionary)
relationships among various species. - The number of residues that differ in homologous
proteins from any two species is in proportion to
the phylogenetic difference between those
species. - 48 amino acid residues are variable between
cytochromes C from the horse and yeast. In
contrast, only two residues differ between the
cytochromes C of duck and chicken. - Within humans, 20 to 30 of the proteins are
considered to be polymorphic, which means that
they have amino acid sequence variations that do
not result in loss of function of the protein.
16Relevant and Important Websites
- There are a number of website that will allow you
to obtain a wealth of information about a
protein, it the primary sequence is known, or if
the DNA sequence is known. - Additionally, in contrast to the laborious
methods associated with sequence determination,
since the entire genomes of many organisms have
already been sequenced, a small amount of peptide
information will allow the identity of a protein
to be determined. - http//us.expasy.org/
- http//us.expasy.org/alinks.htmlProteins
- http//us.expasy.org/tools/