Electrophoresis Reagents - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Electrophoresis Reagents

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Learn about the reagents and techniques and examples of use for electrophoresis. Electrophoresis is a technique which separates charged biomolecules based on the rate at which they migrate in an applied electrical field. In many cases, electrophoresis of proteins are performed using polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE). For molecular weight estimation and purity determination of proteins, sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-PAGE is frequently employed. Laemmli’s method is the most widely used system of SDS-PAGE. Agarose gel electrophoresis is one of the most common methods used to size-separate and analyze DNA. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Electrophoresis Reagents


1
Electrophoresis Reagents
2
Electrophoresis
  • Electrophoresis is a technique which separates
    charged biomolecules based on the rate at which
    they migrate in an applied electrical field.
  • In many cases, electrophoresis of proteins are
    performed using polyacrylamide gel
    electrophoresis (PAGE). For molecular weight
    estimation and purity determination of proteins,
    sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-PAGE is frequently
    employed.
  • Agarose gel electrophoresis is one of the most
    common methods used to size-separate and analyze
    DNA. 

3
Reagents for Gel Preparation, Buffer Preparation,
etc
A3217 30 Acrylamide / Bis-acrylamide (291) for Electrophoresis
A3218 30 Acrylamide / Bis-acrylamide (37.51) for Electrophoresis
A1132 Acrylamide Monomer for Electrophoresis
M0506 N,N'-Methylenebisacrylamide for Electrophoresis
A2098 Ammonium Peroxodisulfate for Electrophoresis
B3195 Bromophenol Blue Sodium Salt ( BPB) for Electrophoresis
D3647 DL-Dithiothreitol ( DL-DTT) for Electrophoresis
G0316 Glycerol for Electrophoresis
G0317 Glycine for Electrophoresis
M1948 2-Mercaptoethanol for Electrophoresis
S0588 Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate ( SDS) for Electrophoresis
T2515 N,N,N',N'-Tetramethylethylenediamine ( TEMED) for Electrophoresis
T2516 Tris(hydroxymethyl)aminomethane ( Tris-Base) for Electrophoresis
T3843 1-Thioglycerol for Electrophoresis
4
Protein Electrophoresis- SDS
  • SDS is a strong denaturant of proteins and is
    added to samples, gels, and buffer solutions for
    electrodes when proteins are separated with
    electrophoresis.
  • As SDS not only denatures protein but also binds
    to the protein, when SDS is used in conjunction
    with a reducing reagent such as 2-mercaptoethanol
    to cleave disulfide bonds in the protein, and the
    protein is completely denatured, the amount of
    SDS bound is almost always proportional to the
    molecular weight of the protein.
  • Resultantly, the protein is negatively charged.
    Therefore, the denatured protein can be separated
    by molecular weight independently of its
    structure and biological properties.

5
Laemmlis Method - SDS
  • Laemmlis method is the most widely used system
    of SDS-PAGE. In this method, the separation and
    the stacking gel contain Tris-HCl and the upper
    and lower buffer reservoirs contain Tris-glycine.
    All components of the system contain SDS.
  • The advantage of Laemmlis method is that it
    gives sharper bands in the final plate.

6
SDS-PAGE Sample Buffers
  • Sample buffers are available in three different
    concentrations to allow for easy use with any
    sample volume. No reducing agent is included-add
    as required. A red sample bufferis also available
    to help prevent sample mix-up.
  • For Example of use, Visit https//www.tcichemical
    s.com/IN/en/product/topics/electrophoresis_reagent
    s

B5834 2X SDS-PAGE Sample Buffer (2-Mercaptoethanol free) for Electrophoresis
B6104 4X SDS-PAGE Sample Buffer (2-Mercaptoethanol free) for Electrophoresis
B6105 6X Sample Buffer (2-Mercaptoethanol free) for Electrophoresis
B6110 2X SDS-PAGE Sample Buffer Phenol Red (2-Mercaptoethanol free) for Electrophoresis
7
Gel Staining Reagent 
  • Detecting protein bands in a polyacrylamide gel
    after electrophoresis requires the gel to be
    stained. Common staining methods include
    Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining, silver
    staining, fluorescence staining, and negative
    staining.
  • Negative staining is a method in which only
    regions of gel containing protein remain
    unstained, while the remainder of the gel is
    stained white.
  • Bands can be visualized by placing the gel
    against a dark background.

8
Gel Negative-Staining Kit
  • The Gel Negative-Staining Kit is used for Rapid
    and Highly Sensitive Protein Detection in as
    little as 20 minutes.
  • Furthermore, stained gels can easily be destained
    using the included destaining solution, with the
    destained gel is able to be used in further
    downstream applications, such as Western blotting
    and mass spectrometry.
  • G0615 Gel Negative Stain kit

9
Example of use (Staining gels with G0615)
  • 1) Place the post-SDS-PAGE gel in a tray
    containing enough deionized water to cover the
    gel and shake for 10 minutes.
  • 2) Discard the deionized water, add enough
    solution A (diluted 10 times with deionized
    water) to cover the gel and shake for 5 minutes.
  • 3) Submerge gel in deionized water for 10 seconds
    to wash. Repeat three times.
  • 4) Transfer the gel to a new tray, add enough
    solution B (diluted 10 times with deionized
    water) to cover the gel and shake for 1 minute to
    develop color.

Figure. Photograph of gel stained by G0615
10
Example of use (Preparation of gel for Western
Blotting)
  • Place the stained and photographed gel in a tray
    containing solution C diluted 10-fold with
    deionized water.
  • Shake the gel until the color is removed.
  • Discard solution C, add enough deionized water to
    cover the gel and wash for 30 seconds. Repeat
    three times.
  • Transfer the washed gel to a membrane (PVDF).

Figure. A Gels loaded with mouse serum and
stained with G0615.B The gel in A was destained
and mouse IgG was detected via Western Blotting.
11
Gel Staining Reagent (Methanol-free CBB Stain
Solution)
  • C3488 is a methanol- and acetic acid-free
    one-component ready-to-use solution for staining
    proteins.
  • Example of use (Staining gels with C3488)
  • 1) After gelelectrophoresis, wash the gel with
    deionized water for 5 minutes three times.
  • 2) Remove the water, add C3488 till the gel is
    soaked and shake the gel gently for 1 hour at
    room temperature.
  • 3) Remove C3488 and destain the gel with
    deionized water for 1 hour. If high background
    staining is observed, destain the gel with
    deionized water overnight at room temperature.

12
Figure. Proteins stained by C3488 (destained
overnight)
13
Reagents for Protein Staining and Others
A2097 Acid Black 1 ( Amido Black 10B) for Electrophoresis
A2256 Acid Red 112 ( Ponceau S) for Biochemical Research
B3193 Coomassie Brilliant Blue G-250 for Electrophoresis
B3194 Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 for Electrophoresis
F0718 Fast Green FCF for Biochemical Research
D1820 Sodium Deoxycholate for Electrophoresis
A2255 6-Aminohexanoic Acid for Biochemical Research
14
DNA Electrophoresis
  • The nucleotides that make up DNA carry a negative
    charge due to their phosphate groups, and are
    therefore attracted to the anode when run on an
    agarose gel.
  • As the DNA moves through the gaps in the mesh of
    the agarose gel, longer molecules, with higher
    molecular weights, move more slowly, while
    smaller molecules are able to move more quickly.
  • This method, of separating molecules by size on a
    gel using electricity, is known as gel
    electrophoresis.

15
Nucleic Acid Staining Reagent (Ethidium Bromide
Solution)
Nucleic Acid Sample Preparation Reagents for
Electrophoresis
L0393 6X Loading Buffer Bromophenol Blue for Electrophoresis for Molecular Biology (1 mL3)
L0440 6X Loading Buffer Double BX for Electrophoresis for Molecular Biology (1 mL3)
Ethidium bromide is widely used as a DNA staining
agent with agarose gels and can detect DNA with
high sensitivity through visualization using UV
light. However, its carcinogenicity means it must
be handled with care. E1363 comes in a dropper
bottle pre-dissolved, making it safe and easy to
use. E1363 Ethidium Bromide (0.5mg/mL in
Water) (in Dropper Bottle) for Electrophoresis
16
Example of use (Staining gels with E1363)
  • 1) After electrophoresis, dilute E1363 (1 drop /
    40 mL) to 0.5 µg/mL with water or running buffer
    and incubate the gel for 15 minutes.
  • 2) If you have to decrease background
    fluorescence, wash the gel in water for 15
    minutes.
  • 3) In use of electrophoresis buffer solution,
    Ethidium bromide incorporated into nucleic acid
    and can visualize band immediately by using UV
    transilluminator.

Figure. DNA Ladder Marker stained
by E1363 (destained 15 minutes)
17
Nucleic Acid Staining Reagent (Nucleic Acid Stain
Blue)
  • Nucleic acid stain blue is used to stain nucleic
    acids after agarose gel electrophoresis. As
    nucleic acids are stained blue, no
    transilluminator or other detection device is
    required. Unlike ethidium bromide, it is
    non-mutagenic and therefore safe and easy to
    handle.
  • N1209 10X Nucleic Acid Stain Blue
    for Electrophoresis

18
Example of use (Staining gels with N1209)
  • Prepare N1209 diluted 10 times with deionized
    water.
  • After electrophoresis, immerse the gel in the
    diluted N1209 and shake for 10 minutes.
  • Discard the staining solution and shake the gel
    with deionized water for 30 minutes and wash the
    gel. Repeat the wash step if background is high.

Figure. Photograph of gel stained
by N1209 (destained overnight)
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