Title: Protein Isolation and Quantification
1Protein Isolation and Quantification
ABE Workshop 2007
2DNA
RNA
Protein
3How to isolate total protein
- Lyse the cell,
- Solubilize the proteins
- To Solubilize membrane protein, we have to use
detergents in the protein extraction buffer
4The often used detergents in the protein
extraction buffer
- Nonionic detergents (milder)
- Triton X-100 break lipid-lipid interaction
and - lipid-protein interaction
- Anionic detergents (more denaturing)
- SDS protein-protein interaction
- Sodium Deoxycholate protein-protein
interaction -
5Proteases inhibitors
- Upon lysis of the cell, proteases are released
into the lysate - What are proteases?
- Where are the proteases from when isolating the
protein?
6What are proteases?
- Protease (proteinases, peptidases or proteolytic
enzymes) are enzymes that break peptide bonds
between amino acids of proteins
7Where are the proteases from when isolating the
protein?
- Animal cells Lysosomes, contain a large variety
of hydrolytic enzymes that degrade proteins and
other substances - Plant cells Vacuole, many hydrolytic enzymes
found in vacuole resemble those present in
Lysosomes of animal cells - other organelles also have proteases
8How to prevent the proteins from degradation by
protease?
- the protein isolation is carried out at low
temperature to minimize the activities of these
proteases - To further optimize the results, we use the
proteases inhibitors
9Often used chemical protease inhibitors in
protein isolation
- EDTA (or EGTA) chelating the Ca2,
- PMSF a general serine protease inhibitor. It is
the most common inhibitor used in protein
purification. Soluble in isopropanol. - The protease inhibitors cocktail a mixture of
several protease inhibitors with broad
specificity
10The protein quantification
- UV 280 absorption
- Colorimetric methods
- Biuret
- Lowry
- Bradford
11UV absorption method
- The amino acids tryptophan, tyrosine and
phenylalanine absorb light in the UV wavelength - Since the absorption is proportional to
concentration, this is a useful way to
quantitates protein concentration (for proteins
containing Trp)
12Disadvantages of UV absorption method
- If some proteins do not contain these amino
acids, it will not absorb UV light, - Nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) contaminant will also
absorb UV light,
13Colorimetric methods
- we can modify the protein sample with appropriate
reagents so as to produce a color reaction and
measure protein concentration using a
spectrophotometer.
14Advantages of Colorimetric methods
- 1. Cheap cuvette! (cheap glass or plastic versus
quartz quartz) - 2. Not contaminating absorbance from nucleic
acids!
15Colorimetric methods I Bradford Method
- A dye known as Coomassie Brilliant Blue was
developed by the textile industry. It was
noticed to stain skin as well as the textiles. - This dye (which normally absorbs at 465nm) binds
to proteins and to absorb strongly at 595nm. - The assay is sensitive, but somewhat non-linear
16Lowry Method
- A widely-used method of measuring protein
concentration - A colorimetric assay
- Amount of blue color proportional to amount of
protein - Absorbance read using 500-750nm light
- Lowry et al, 1951
17Lowry Method
- Two reactions make the blue color develop
- Reaction 1
- Cu2 peptide bonds ? Cu1-peptide bond
complex, produces purple-blue color - Reaction 2
- Folin reagent Cu1-complex ? reduced Folin
reagent, produces blue-green
18Making a standard curve with BSA (bovine serum
albumin)
- A graph that correlates Absorbance with protein
- concentration
- Standard Curve generated by doing a Lowry Assay
- on protein solutions of known concentration
- Standard Curve must be done each time unknowns
- are being tested
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21The SDS-PAGE
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23PAGE
- Gels are cast by polymerizing a solution of
acrylamide monomers into polyacrylamide chains - Gel pore size can be varied by adjusting the
concentrations of polyacrylamide - Smaller proteins migrate faster than larger
proteins through the gel
24Native proteins
25SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) binds to and coat
the protein
26SDS
1. SDS disrupts some of the noncovalent
interactions that stabilize protein quaternary
and tertiary structures, facilitates
denaturation. 2. SDS also has a negative
electrical charge and binds to proteins in a
constant mass ratio of 1.4 1, so that the total
amount of detergent bound is directly
proportional to the molecular weight of the
protein. 3. The coating of negatively charged
SDS overwhelms the inherent charges of protein
molecules and gives them a uniform charge to mass
ratio. 4. This allows proteins to be separated
on the basis of their relative sizes,
27SDS
- all polypeptide chains are then forced into
extended conformations - SDS treatment eliminates the effect of
differences in shape - individual polypeptide chains migrate as a
negatively charged SDS-protein complex through
the porous polyacrylamide gel - speed of migration is proportional to the size of
the proteins - smaller polypeptides running faster than larger
polypeptides
28How about covalent link?
DTT/Me
SH
S-S
HS
29Noncovalent
covalent
30Heating the sample
- Heating your samples at 99ºC completed
denaturation of the protein molecules, ensuring
that they were in completely linear form. - This allowed SDS to bind all regions of each
protein equally.
31Protein loading buffer
- Protein gel loading buffer contains Tris buffer
to maintain constant pH - glycerol to increase sample density,
- the strong ionic detergent SDS (sodium
dodecylsulfate), - ß-mercaptoethanol, a reducing agent. .Â
Beta-mercaptoethanol eliminates disulfide bonds
in proteins by reducing them (adding hydrogen
atoms).  - Heating
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33Running the gel
34Stacking gel
- To obtain optimal resolution of proteins, a
stacking gel is poured over the top of the
resolving gel. - The stacking gel
- lower concentration of acrylamide (larger
pore size), - lower pH
- different ionic content
- This allows the proteins in a lane to be
concentrated into a tight band before entering
the running or resolving gel - produces a gel with tighter or better separated
protein bands
35Gel staining
- Once proteins have been fractionated by
electrophoresis, to make them visible, staining
with a material that will bind to proteins but
not polyacrylamide. - the most common one staining with Coomassie
Blue. - This is a dye that binds most proteins uniformly
based on interactions with the carbon-nitrogen
backbone. - The dye is dissolved in a solution that contains
both methanol and acetic acid
36gel-drying framesfor drying of SDS-PAGE gels
37Gel drying
- SDS-PAGE gels between two moistened sheets of Gel
Drying Film (from Promega) on the bench. - Clamp the Gel Drying Frame
- Dry over night
- It is important to remove all the air bubbles
from between the two sheets of gel drying films.
Air bubbles may cause the gel to crack during
drying
38References
- http//www.bio.davidson.edu/people/jowilliamson/Te
chniques/Protocolweek5.html - Lowry, O. H., Rosebrough, N. J., Farr, A. L., and
Randall, R. J. (1951) J. Biol. Chem.193, 265275 - www.bio-itworld.com/ archive/091103/russell.html
- http//dwb.unl.edu/Teacher/NSF/C08/C08Links/pps99.
cryst.bbk.ac.uk/projects/gmocz/gfp.htm
39Transfer
- In this procedure, a sandwich of gel and solid
support membrane (Nitrocellulose or PVDF) is
compressed in a cassette and immersed in buffer
between two parallel electrodes. - A current is passed at right angles to the gel,
which causes the separated proteins to
electrophorese out of the gel and onto the solid
support membrane
40Transfer the protein from the gel to the membrane
- Transfer of the proteins fractionated by SDS-PAGE
to a solid support membrane (Western blotting)
can be accomplished by electroblotting