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1.
Proteomics requires an optimized level of sample-processing, including a minimal sample-processing time and an optimal peptide recovery from protein digests, in order to maximize the percentage sequence coverage and to improve the accuracy of protein identification. The conventional methods of protein characterization from one-dimensional or two-dimensional gels include the destaining of an excised gel piece, followed by an overnight in-gel enzyme digestion. The aims of this study were to determine whether: (1) stained gels can be used without any destaining for trypsin digestion and mass spectrometry (MS); (2) tryptic peptides can be recovered from a matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization (MALDI) target plate for a subsequent analysis with liquid chromatography (LC) coupled to an electrospray ionization (ESI) quadrupole ion trap MS; and (3) an overnight in-gel digestion is necessary for protein characterization with MS. These three strategies would significantly improve sample throughput. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was the model biological fluid used to develop these methods. CSF was desalted by gel filtration, and CSF proteins were separated by two-dimensional gel electrophoresis (2DGE). Proteins were visualized with either silver, Coomassie, or Stains-All (counterstained with silver). None of the gels was destained. Protein spots were in-gel trypsin digested, the tryptic peptides were purified with ZipTip, and the peptides were analyzed with MALDI and ESI MS. Some of the samples that were spotted onto a wax-coated MALDI target plate were recovered and analyzed with ESI MS. All three types of stained gels were compatible with MALDI and ESI MS without any destaining. In-gel trypsin digestion can be performed in only 10-60 min for protein characterization with MS, the sample can be recovered from the MALDI target plate for use in ESI MS, and there was a 90% reduction in sample-processing time from overnight to ca. 3 h.  相似文献   

2.
Proteins separated by two-dimensional (2-D) gel electrophoresis can be visualized using various protein staining methods. This is followed by downstream procedures, such as image analysis, gel spot cutting, protein digestion, and mass spectrometry (MS), to characterize protein expression profiles within cells, tissues, organisms, or body fluids. Characterizing specific post-translational modifications on proteins using MS of peptide fragments is difficult and labor-intensive. Recently, specific staining methods have been developed and merged into the 2-D gel platform so that not only general protein patterns but also patterns of phosphorylated and glycosylated proteins can be obtained. We used the new Pro-Q Diamond phosphoprotein dye technology for the fluorescent detection of phosphoproteins directly in 2-D gels of mouse leukocyte proteins, and Pro-Q Emerald 488 glycoprotein dye to detect glycoproteins. These two fluorescent stains are compatible with general protein stains, such as SYPRO Ruby stain. We devised a sequential procedure using Pro-Q Diamond (phosphoprotein), followed by Pro-Q Emerald 488 (glycoprotein), followed by SYPRO Ruby stain (general protein stain), and finally silver stain for total protein profile. This multiple staining of the proteins in a single gel provided parallel determination of protein expression and preliminary characterization of post-translational modifications of proteins in individual spots on 2-D gels. Although this method does not provide the same degree of certainty as traditional MS methods of characterizing post-translational modifications, it is much simpler, faster, and does not require sophisticated equipment and expertise in MS.  相似文献   

3.
SYPRO Ruby IEF Protein Gel Stain is an ultrasensitive, luminescent stain optimized for the analysis of protein in isoelectric focusing gels. Proteins are stained in a ruthenium-containing metal complex overnight and then rinsed in distilled water for 2 h. Stained proteins can be excited by ultraviolet light of about 302 nm (UV-B transilluminator) or with visible light of about 470 nm. Fluorescence emission of the dye is maximal at approximately 610 nm. The sensitivity of the SYPRO Ruby IEF protein gel stain is superior to colloidal Coomassie blue stain and the highest sensitivity silver staining procedures available. The SYPRO Ruby IEF protein gel stain is suitable for staining proteins in nondenaturing or denaturing carrier ampholyte isoelectric focusing and immobilized pH gradient gel electrophoresis. The stain is compatible with N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide or piperazine diacylamide cross-linked polyacrylamide gels as well as with agarose gels and high tensile strength Duracryl gels. The stain does not contain extraneous chemicals (formaldehyde, glutaraldehyde, Tween-20) that frequently interfere with peptide identification in mass spectrometry. Successful identification of stained proteins by peptide mass profiling is demonstrated.  相似文献   

4.
Due to its high sensitivity, silver staining is a widely popular method for the revelation of biopolymers separated by both native and denaturing electrophoresis. A step-by-step method for the destaining and restaining of overdeveloped/overloaded silver-stained bands is described that is applicable to both proteins and nucleic acids. The procedure significantly improves densitometric analysis of gels that have been silver stained with either commercial kits or solutions made in-house. The method permits reproducible densitometry of silver-stained gels and allows quantification of both main and minor components in complex mixture of molecules resolved on the same gel slab. All steps may be interrupted and are readily reversible, allowing for facile densitometric analyses and photographic recording under optimized conditions. Furthermore, common artifacts such as differential staining of the two gel surfaces, localized uneven yellow-ochre background, and the presence of fold marks and fingerprints can be easily removed.  相似文献   

5.
SYPRO Tangerine stain is an environmentally benign alternative to conventional protein stains that does not require solvents such as methanol or acetic acid for effective protein visualization. Instead, proteins can be stained in a wide range of buffers, including phosphate-buffered saline or simply 150 mM NaCl using an easy, one-step procedure that does not require destaining. Stained proteins can be excited by ultraviolet light of about 300 nm or with visible light of about 490 nm. The fluorescence emission maximum of the dye is approximately 640 nm. Noncovalent binding of SYPRO Tangerine dye is mediated by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and to a lesser extent by hydrophobic amino acid residues in proteins. This is in stark contrast to acidic silver nitrate staining, which interacts predominantly with lysine residues or Coomassie Blue R, which in turn interacts primarily with arginine and lysine residues. The sensitivity of SYPRO Tangerine stain is similar to that of the SYPRO Red and SYPRO Orange stains - about 4-10 ng per protein band. This detection sensitivity is comparable to colloidal Coomassie blue staining and rapid silver staining procedures. Since proteins stained with SYPRO Tangerine dye are not fixed, they can easily be eluted from gels or utilized in zymographic assays, provided that SDS does not inactivate the protein of interest. This is demonstrated with in-gel detection of rabbit liver esterase activity using alpha-naphthyl acetate and Fast Blue BB dye as well as Escherichia coli beta-glucuronidase activity using ELF-97 beta-D-glucuronide. The dye is also suitable for staining proteins in gels prior to their transfer to membranes by electroblotting. Gentle staining conditions are expected to improve protein recovery after electroelution and to reduce the potential for artifactual protein modifications such as the alkylation of lysine and esterification of glutamate residues, which complicate interpretation of peptide fragment profiles generated by mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

6.
Proteomic projects are often focused on the discovery of differentially expressed proteins between control and experimental samples. Most laboratories choose the approach of running two-dimensional (2-D) gels, analyzing them and identifying the differentially expressed proteins by in-gel digestion and mass spectrometry. To date, the available stains for visualizing proteins on 2-D gels have been less than ideal for these projects because of poor detection sensitivity (Coomassie blue stain) or poor peptide recovery from in-gel digests and mass spectrometry (silver stain), unless extra destaining and washing steps are included in the protocol. In addition, the limited dynamic range of these stains has made it difficult to rigorously and reliably determine subtle differences in protein quantities. SYPRO Ruby Protein Gel Stain is a novel, ruthenium-based fluorescent dye for the detection of proteins in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) gels that has properties making it well suited to high-throughput proteomics projects. The advantages of SYPRO Ruby Protein Gel Stain relative to silver stain demonstrated in this study include a broad linear dynamic range and enhanced recovery of peptides from in-gel digests for matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometry.  相似文献   

7.
The fluorescent sensitive SYPRO Red dye was successfully employed to stain proteins in two-dimensional gels for protein identification by peptide mass fingerprinting. Proteins which are not chemically modified during the SYPRO Red staining process are well digested enzymatically in the gel and hence the resulting peptides can be efficiently eluted and analysed by matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF MS). A SYPRO Red two-dimensional gel of a complex protein extract from Candida albicans was analysed by MALDI-TOF MS. The validity of SYPRO Red staining was demonstrated by identifying, via peptide mass fingerprinting, 10 different C. albicans proteins from a total of 31 selected protein spots. The peptide mass signal intensity, the number of matched peptides and the percentage of coverage of protein sequences from SYPRO Red-stained proteins were similar to or greater than those obtained in parallel with the modified silver protein gel staining. This work demonstrates that fluorescent SYPRO Red staining is compatible with the identification of proteins separated on polyacrylamide gel and that it can be used as an alternative to silver staining. As far as we know, this is the first report in which C. albicans proteins separated using 2-D gels have been identified by peptide mass fingerprinting. The improved technique described here should be very useful for carrying out proteomic studies.  相似文献   

8.
The development of equipment for fast automated staining is described. It is possible to handle staining procedures with up to 20 steps and nine different solutions. To increase the reaction rate in the reaction chamber, the gels are rotated and high temperatures are used. The temperature in the reaction chamber is controlled between room temperature and 50 degrees C. Increased temperature, above 20 degrees C, generally results in faster staining and destaining. However, some reactions proceed better at a low temperature, including fixation of proteins with TCA, and the development step in silver staining, where increased temperatures cause a high background stain. Silver staining using acidic silver nitrate solution is preferred, due to easy preparation and good storage stability of the reagents. This method also causes little precipitation of silver on the walls of the reaction chamber. Silver staining is accomplished within one hour. Staining with PhastGel Blue is accomplished within 30 min.  相似文献   

9.
A new method is described for fast and sensitive staining of proteins following isoelectric focusing in carrier ampholyte and immobilized pH gradient polyacrylamide gels. After fixation with trichloroacetic acid the gels are stained for 5-10 min with 0.1-0.2% colloidal Serva Violet 17 (generic name: Acid Violet 17; Color Index No. 42,650) in 10% w/v phosphoric acid. After staining for only 0.5-3 min, major zones, corresponding to 100-500 ng protein, are visible without destaining on a weak background. Detection of minor components requires destaining with 3% w/v phosphoric acid for 5-80 min depending on gel thickness (120-500 microns) and type of support (fabric reinforced versus gels backed to a polyester film). For selected pH marker proteins (bovine serum albumin, carbonic anhydrase, horse myoglobin) a staining sensitivity of 1-2 ng/mm2 protein is found. Dye elution from stained fabric reinforced gels with 50% v/v dioxane-water, followed by absorbance measurements, results in a linear relationship over a range of 1-100 micrograms marker proteins. Staining with collodial Serva Violet 17 is the only method available for fast and high sensitivity and low background staining of immobilized pH gradient gels, without interference from selective dye binding in different pH ranges. Staining with the collodial dye is convenient by avoiding organic solvents with unpleasant vapors and potentially hazardous.  相似文献   

10.
Large-pore-size agarose gels provide excellent resolving capacity for high molecular weight biomolecules. Thin-layer agarose isoelectric focusing (IEF) gels on polyester support films are especially useful for the separation of large proteins based on their pI in native conformation, but the method has suffered from the lack of detection methods compatible with agarose gels in hydrated form. Recently, an acrylamide copolymerization method was reported to enable mass-spectrometry-compatible silver staining and in-gel digestion of proteins. In this study, the method was further applied by demonstrating successful reverse imidazole-zinc staining of thin-layer agarose IEF gels copolymerized with acrylamide. The sensitivity of the reverse staining method on the composite gel at its best equaled the sensitivity of the traditional dried agarose silver staining method. Owing to the increased durability and reversible detection, the reverse-stained first-dimension gel could be conveniently prepared for the second-dimension sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis by reduction and alkylation. In addition, the micropreparative generation of tryptic peptides of Coomassie brilliant blue R-250 stained proteins in the composite gel is demonstrated.  相似文献   

11.
The use of low-molecular-mass color pI markers for the determination of pI values of proteins in gel isoelectric focusing (IEF) in combination with mass spectrometry is described. Different types of substituted phenols of known pI values within the mass range 250-400 were used here as pI markers. The pure, synthesized pI markers were studied by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. Fragmentation studies of the pI markers were also performed. Only stable and well-characterized pI markers were used in this work. The selected pI markers were mixed with proteins, deposited on a gel and separated in a pH gradient. Color pI markers enable supervision of progress of the focusing process and also estimation of the position of the invisible focused bands. The separated bands of the pI markers (containing separated proteins) were excised, and the pI markers were eluted from each gel piece by water/ethanol and identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. From the washed gel pieces the remaining carrier ampholytes were then washed out and proteins were in-gel digested with trypsin. The obtained peptides were measured by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS and the proteins identified via a protein database search. This procedure allows avoiding time-consuming protein staining and destaining procedures, which shortens the analysis time roughly by half. For comparison, IEF gels were stained with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R 250 and proteins in the gel bands were identified according to the standard proteomic protocol. This work has confirmed that our approach can give information about the correct pI values of particular proteins and shorten significantly the time of analysis.  相似文献   

12.
Chmelík J  Mazanec K  Slais K 《Electrophoresis》2007,28(18):3315-3323
A new proteomic staining-free method for simultaneous identification of proteins and determination of their pI values by using low-molecular-mass pI markers is described. It is based on separation of proteins in gels by IEF in combination with mass spectrometric analysis of both peptides derived by in-gel digestion and low-molecular-mass pI markers extracted form the same piece excised from the gel. In this method, the pI markers are mixed with a protein mixture (a commercial malted barley protein extract) deposited on a gel and separated in a pH gradient. Color pI markers enable supervision of progress of focusing process. Several separated bands of the pI markers (including separated proteins) were excised and the pI markers were eluted from each gel piece by water/ethanol and identified by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS. The remaining carrier ampholytes were then washed out from gel pieces and proteins were in-gel digested with trypsin or chymotrypsin. Obtained peptides were measured by MALDI-TOF/TOF MS and proteins were identified via protein database search. This procedure allows omitting time-consuming protein staining and destaining procedures, which shortens the analysis time. For comparison, other IEF gels were stained with CBB R 250 and proteins in the gel bands were identified. Similarity of the results confirmed that our approach can give information about the correct pI values of particular proteins in complex samples at significantly shorter analysis times. This method can be very useful for identification of proteins and their post-translational modifications in prefractioned samples, where post-translational modifications (e.g., glycation) are frequent.  相似文献   

13.
Shimoni and Reuveni [1] have reported a procedure which uses Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 staining and destaining to stabilize H2O2-guaiacol stained peroxidases on polyacrylamide gels and at the same time detects nonspecific protein bands. The procedure has the advantage that the otherwise orange and unstable peroxidase bands are visualized as blue bands and it, therefore, facilitates laser densitometry of electrophoretically separated peroxidases. In the modification of the procedure reported here, the Coomassie staining reagent was adjusted and the destaining step was eliminated. The modified procedure has added advantages: it simplifies the procedure, increases the consistency of the results across gels, prevents or reduces the staining of nonspecific proteins, and still gives excellent resolution of stable bands which can be used to quantify peroxidase activity.  相似文献   

14.
Kang C  Kim HJ  Kang D  Jung DY  Suh M 《Electrophoresis》2003,24(19-20):3297-3304
Fluorescein has an extremely low luminescence intensity in acidic aqueous media. However, when it was bound to proteins, subsequent increase of luminescence intensity took place. Furthermore, when a hydrophobic tail, such as aliphatic hydrocarbons, was introduced to fluorescein, more dramatic increase of luminescence intensity was observed upon binding to proteins. In the present study, by utilizing this luminescence enhancement, three hydrophobic fluorescein dyes (5-dodecanoyl amino fluorescein, 5-hexadecanoyl amino fluorescein, and 5-octadecanoyl amino fluorescein) were examined as noncovalent fluorescent stains of protein bands in sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE). Effective incorporation of the dyes to proteins in gels was accomplished either simply by adding dyes at the protein fixation step, or by treating gels with a staining solution after the fixation. The sensitivity of this staining method using the fluorescein derivatives was approximately 1 ng/band for most proteins. For some cases, protein bands containing as low as 0.1 ng were successfully visualized. In addition, the detection sensitivity showed much less protein-to-protein variation than silver staining. This new staining method was also successfully applied to two-dimensional electrophoresis of rat brain proteins. Its overall sensitivity was comparable to that of silver staining.  相似文献   

15.
Researchers in molecular biology spend a significant amount of time tending to the staining and destaining of electrophoresis gels. Here we describe a simple system, costing approximately $100 and taking approximately 1 h to assemble, that automates standard nucleic acid and protein gel staining protocols. Staining is done in a tray or, with DNA gels, in the electrophoresis chamber itself following automatic detection of the voltage drop. Miniature pumps controlled by a microcontroller chip exchange the necessary solutions at programmed time intervals. We demonstrate efficient and highly reproducible ethidium bromide and methylene blue staining of DNA in agarose gels and Coomassie blue and silver staining of proteins in polyacrylamide gels.  相似文献   

16.
Optimised silver staining protocols were devised for the detection of membrane proteins in purified form and as a crude mixture. These were adduced in both sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS) and native polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and consisted of ethanol-acetic acid-formaldehyde fixation, Coomassie Brilliant Blue prestaining, Rapidfix pretreatment, formaldehyde enhancement and finally ammoniacal silver staining. With these modifications, numerous staining problems of membrane proteins were overcome. These included reduction in background staining, enhanced detection sensitivity in native gels, elimination of negative staining and the avoidance of metallic silver deposition on the gel surface. In overcoming these problems, some factors determining the colour and stainability of membrane proteins in their native state were determined. Both the anionic Coomassie Brilliant Blue dye and SDS detergent improved the sensitivity of silver staining in native gels, and ammoniacal silver was more sensitive than neutral silver, suggesting silver staining to be a charge dependent process.  相似文献   

17.
K Peisker 《Electrophoresis》1990,11(2):152-155
The suitability of four different fabric materials for the preparation of ultrathin rein-forced polyacrylamide gels was investigated. With all fabric-reinforced gels, a good separation of proteins by isoelectric focusing and sodium dodecyl sulfate-electrophoresis could be achieved. Semi-dry electrophoretic blotting of proteins was possible with all types of fabric-reinforced gels. Two polyester fabrics (a net and a fleece) were decidedly superior in handling and dimensional stability on drying to a nylon fabric and another polyester fleece material. Only gels prepared with the former materials withstood further treatment, such as fixation, staining, destaining, and drying. One of the polyester fleece fabrics had poor handling properties and the nylon fabric was unsuitable for direct staining procedures employing concentrated (20% w/v) trichloroacetic acid as fixative.  相似文献   

18.
2-DE combined with LC-MS/MS has become a routine, reliable protein separation and identification technology for proteome analysis. The demand for large-scale protein identifications after 2-DE separation requires a sensitive and high-throughput LC-MS/MS method. In this report, a simple, splitless, fully automated capillary LC-MS/MS system was described for the large-scale identification of proteins from gels stained with either silver or CBB. The gel samples were digested and peptides were extracted using an in-gel digestion workstation. The peptides were automatically introduced into a capillary column by an autosampler connected to an HPLC pump. A nanoLC pump was then used to deliver the gradient and elute the peptides from the capillary column directly into an LCQ IT mass spectrometer. Neither a peptide trapping setting nor a flow split is needed in this simple setup. The collected MS/MS spectra were then automatically searched by SEQUEST, and filtered and organized by DTASelect. Hundreds of silver-stained or CBB-stained Shewanella oneidensis, Geobacter sulfurreducens, and Geobacter metallireducens proteins separated by denaturing or nondenaturing 2-DE were digested and routinely analyzed using this fully automated muLC-MS/MS system. High peptide hits and sequence coverage were achieved for most CBB-stained gel spots. About 75% of the spots were found to contain multiple proteins. Although silver staining is not commonly thought to be optimal for MS analysis, protein identifications were successfully obtained from silver-stained 2-DE spots detected using methods with and without formaldehyde for protein fixation.  相似文献   

19.
This study demonstrates structural and conformational characterization of proteins by nanoflow electrospray ionization (nanoESI) mass spectrometry (MS) and tandem mass spectrometry (MS/MS) utilizing a quadrupole time-of-flight (Q-TOF) mass spectrometer (Micromass, Manchester, England). Model peptides were successfully sequenced at the 35 attomole (amol) level, and peptides derived from a tryptic in-gel digest of 25 femtomole (fmol) bovine serum albumin (BSA) were successfully sequenced. The results demonstrated that the MS/MS sensitivity of the Q-TOF clearly surpassed the detection limit of the silver stain. A silver destaining step greatly improved the mass analysis of peptides derived from in-gel digests. Interestingly, sequence analysis revealed BSA residue 424 (tyrosine) as a potential chlorination site. In addition, a modified procedure was successfully used to extract and measure the masses of two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2-D PAGE)-resolved proteins in the 10-68.5 kDa range. The Q-TOF was also used to monitor conformational changes of proteins. These experiments demonstrated an acid-induced denaturation of BSA in the pH 3-4 range, and heat-induced unfolding of cytochrome c between 50 and 60 degrees C. Finally, Zn2+ binding was demonstrated for the carbonic anhydrase apoprotein. In summary, the wide range of applications and the high quality of the experimental data made the Q-TOF mass spectrometer a powerful analytical tool for protein characterization.  相似文献   

20.
The effect of the cationic dye Alcian Blue on the silver staining of bacterial lipopolysaccharide and its polysaccharide and lipid A portions in polyacrylamide gels was investigated. The polysaccharide was only stained when the gel was previously treated with the dye. The polysaccharide moiety was found to be responsible for the lipopolysaccharide staining with silver, whereas the lipid A seemed unimportant. Treatment with Alcian Blue may prove useful to detect hydrophilic components of lipopolysaccharide samples that could not be stained by the usual silver staining procedures.  相似文献   

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