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Resources. Protein purification: A practical approach. (Harris
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1. Protein Purification BL4010 10.19.06
2. Resources Protein purification: A practical approach. (Harris& Angal IRL Press)
Protein purification: Design and scale-up of downstream processing. (Wheelwright Hanser Press)
Methods in Enzymology - several volumes are concerned exclusively with protein purification.
Note that whatever book you get, it is already likely to be out of date.
3. Why purify? in vitro vs. in vivo analysis
4. Why purify? By purifying a protein it can be clearly established that a particular biological activity (enzymatic activity, signaling capacity, etc.) actually resides in a unique protein.
Purified proteins serve as extremely valuable biochemical reagents
Determine mechanism (controlled, observable environment)
Structural determination
Sequence determination
Antibody production
Structure/function analysis - genetic engineering
Finding inhibitors
Detailed kinetic studies
5. The basic techniques Concentration (size)
precipitation
ultrafiltration
dialysis
centrifugation
Chromatography (size/charge/chemistry)
ion exchange
size exclusion
affinity Electrophoresis (size/charge)
"native"
denaturing
isoelectric focusing
2-dimensional
Immunological
(size/charge/chemistry)
chromatography
in situ imaging
immunoblotting
6. Getting started Assay (measurable quality) must be specific and convenient
measuring a change in absorbency as NADPH is oxidized in a coupled reaction,
binding activity
a shift of a labeled molecule (DNA, protein) on a gel
the transformation of substrate
the ability to stimulate cell reaction (e.g. proliferation)
Source
easier to purify from a rich source vs. a poor source
7. Protein Purification Principles Define objectives
for purity, activity and quantity required of final product to avoid over or under developing a method
Define properties of target protein and critical impurities
to simplify technique selection and optimisation
Develop analytical assays
for fast detection of protein activity/recovery and to work efficiently
Remove damaging contaminants early
for example, proteases
8. Protein Purification Principles Use a different technique at each step
to take advantage of sample characteristics which can be used for separation (size, charge, hydrophobicity, ligand specificity)
Minimize sample handling at every stage
to avoid lengthy procedures which risk losing activity/reducing recovery
Minimize use of additives
additives may need to be removed in an extra purification step or may interfere with activity assays
Minimize number of steps - KEEP IT SIMPLE!
extra steps reduce yield and increase time, combine steps logically
9. Starting materials Natural source or artificial expression system
Host for expression,
Bacteria, yeast, plants, transgenic animals
Abundance, contaminants
Lysis and clarification procedures
Native or denaturing conditions
Subcellular fractionation
Selective precipitation
PEI, Streptomycin Sulfate, CTAB for RNA/DNA
Ammonium Sulfate for Proteins
10. Capture Quickly remove most damaging contaminants
Concentrate, adsorption methods
Ion Exchange most general
Affinity chromatography can combine capture, intermediate and polishing steps
This step should remove most unwanted contaminants
11. Intermediate purification Use a different technique
Affinity chromatography, Hydrophobic interaction chromatography
Starting conditions are specific for each technique
Buffer must be compatible with adsorption
Can change buffer by dialysis or desalting by GFC
Adsorption techniques result in small volume concentrated sample
12. Polishing Final removal of trace contaminants
Often size exclusion chromatography
Buffer exchange is a part of the process
Sample volume always increases need to start with a concentrated sample
Sample can be concentrated by
Precipitation (selective or nonselective)
Ultrafiltration (dialysis under pressure)
13. Purification schemes
14. Assays, Quantitation and Documentation Assay enzyme activity at every step
Contaminants at early stages can mask or inhibit activity
Inactivation can occur at high temperatures, because of proteolysis, oxidation, aggregation, etc.
Assay total protein
Run an SDS gel to visualize specific contaminants
Specific activity is defined as units of enzymatic activity per unit of total protein -
Yield can be defined in terms of total protein mass, and total enzyme units
Goal is a high yield and high specific activity.
15. Detection Spectroscopy
A280 e 1%280 = 14.5 g-1Lcm-1
10 mg/ml A280 = 14.5
cofactors
Protein Assay
Bradford (coomassie)
Biuret (copper)
Lowry (modified biuret - phosphomolybdotungstate mixed acid reduced by Cu2+ and F,Y,W to form heteropolymolybdenum blue A750
Enzyme Assay
16. Assays Enzymatic assays
PNPP is hydrolyzed to PNP and Pi
Fixed time assay
Mix enzyme and substrate, react for a fixed time, s
top the reaction with a strong base,
read the concentration of PNP at pH>10
Continuous assay
Monitor PNP production directly in the spec at ph 8
Bradford Assays for total protein
SDS page for the distribution of proteins by size.
17. Assay and Specific Activity
18. Criteria for purity When is protein pure or pure enough?
Homogeneity
protein complexes?
Constant specific activity
Practical: further attempts at purification are futile since the only material left in the fraction is the material that actually is responsible for the activity being assayed.
19. Methods of concentration Dialysis
Filtration
20. Protein Precipitation "Salting Out" when enough salt has been added, proteins precipitate
cold prevents denaturation
collect by filtration or centrifugation
redissolved in solution using a buffer with low salt content.
works best with divalent anions like sulfate, especially ammonium sulfate which is highly soluble at ice temperatures
21. Buffer Exchanges Almost all purification steps will be a buffer with specific pH and/or ionic strength
The buffer used impacts the protein's biophysical characteristics
Why exchange?
e.g. If you have just precipitated a protein with ammonium sulfate, you obviously now have that protein in a high salt environment.
How can you remove salt?
22. Centrifugation Zonal centrifugation: Mixture to be separated is layered on top of a gradient (e.g. sucrose or ficoll) increasing concentration down the tube - can be continuous or discontinuous (layers)- provides gravitational stability as different species move down tube at different rates forming separate bands.
Species are separated by differences in SEDIMENTATION COEFFICIENT (S) = Rate of movement down tube/Centrifugal force
S is increased for particle of LARGER MASS(because sedimenting force a M(1-vr)
S is also increased for MORE COMPACT STRUCTURES of equal particle mass (frictional coefficient is less)
23. Centrifugation Isopycnic (equal density) centrifugation: Molecules separated on EQUILIBRIUM POSITION, NOT by RATES of sedimentation.Each molecule floats or sinks to position where density equals density of solution (e.g. CsCl gradient for nucleic acid separation).
24. Chromatography Chromatography: a broad range of physical methods used to separate and or to analyze complex mixtures.
The components to be separated are distributed between two phases: a stationary phase bed and a mobile phase which percolates through the stationary bed.
25. Size-Exclusion Chromatography Separation of proteins based on kinetics of moving through the available space (larger proteins have less space than smaller molecules)
Proteins larger than matrix elute in void volume (1 exchange of volume outside beads)
Proteins smaller than matrix partition in and out of beads
Pore size in beads is not uniform
Also some surface interaction with beads
26. Ionic Exchange Chromatography
27. Hydrophobic interaction chromatography Hydrophobic group bound to solid phase
Binding
high salt (increases water surface tension, decreases available water molecules, increases hydrophobic interactions)
Elution
decrease salt
add detergent
decrease polarity
of mobile phase
28. Affinity Chromatography Ligand can be a small molecule, metal or antibody
Protein binds specifically to ligand attached to matrix
Elution with free ligand
29. Electrophoresis Tris-glycine buffer
10% SDS
32. Electrophoresis
33. Electrophoresis Protein detection
Coomassie blue
Sypro
Cybergreen
Silver staining
34. Using antibodies
35. Using antibodies
36. Western blotting Separate proteins by electrophoresis
Transfer to membrane (e.g. nitrocellulose)
Bind primary antibody
Bind secondary antibody
Detection
37. Immuno-Affinity Chromatography Antibody fixed to matrix
Protein binds to antibody
Wash unbound and loosely bound proteins off column
Elute protein with change in salt/pH
38. Protein purification simulation http://www.tlsu.leeds.ac.uk/courses/bioc2060/proteinlab102/proteinlab.html
39. Example: Purification of Alkaline Phosphatase (AP) Periplasmic Protein in E. coli
The space between the rigid peptidoglycan cell wall and the osmotically sensitive plasma membrane
Phosphate scavenger
Liberates Pi from a variety of substrates
Induced by phosphate starvation
Used to remove terminal phosphates for selective DNA ligation reactions
Heat stable, Zn enzyme
40. Assays Enzymatic assays
PNPP is hydrolyzed to PNP and Pi
Fixed time assay
Mix enzyme and substrate, react for a fixed time, s
top the reaction with a strong base,
read the concentration of PNP at pH>10
Continuous assay
Monitor PNP production directly in the spec at ph 8
Bradford Assays for total protein
SDS page for the distribution of proteins by size.
41. Text Book Purification 1. Lysozyme treatment to release periplasmic proteins
Centrifugation to separate soluble AP from cells
Dialysis to remove starting buffer (overnight)
2. Heat treatment to precipitate weaker proteins
Centrifugation to separate soluble AP from insoluble PPT
Ammonium sulfate to concentrate proteins/remove non protein contaminants
Dialysis to remove ammonium sulfate (O/N)
3. Anion exchange (DEAE) chromatography
Step elution with 0.125M Salt
4. SDS Page to quantify the proteins in each fraction
42. Starting material E. coli cells starved for phosphate
Sucrose shrinks the plasma membrane reduces turgor pressure
Lysozyme cleave glycosidic linkages in cell wall
DNAse reduces viscosity from inadvertantly lysed cells
Left with AP, DNAse, Lysozyme, Sucrose other periplasmic and cytoplasmic contaminants
43. Alternative strategy Osmotic shock used to liberate periplasmic proteins
Many fewer proteins in periplasm than cytoplasm
Sucrose draws water from cytoplasm, shrinks inner membrane
EDTA permeabilizes cell wall
Transfer to low osmotic strength buffer causes the inner membrane to slam into the cell wall and force out periplasmic proteins
Periplasmic proteins, no lysozyme, no DNAase, not much sucrose