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LABORATORY 6: PURIFYING THE FLUORESCENT PROTEIN. 2014. Overview. In Laboratory 5 , students incorporated recombinant plasmid with rfp gene into a living cell and confirmed that transformation was successful
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LABORATORY 6: PURIFYING THE FLUORESCENT PROTEIN 2014
Overview • In Laboratory 5, students incorporated recombinant plasmid with rfp gene into a living cell and confirmed that transformation was successful • In Laboratory 6, students will obtain cell proteins and purify red fluorescent protein from transformed cells grown in shaker flask overnight
Reasons for lysis • Soluble proteins made by cell, including red fluorescent protein, are dissolved in cell cytoplasm • Only way to access soluble proteins is to lyse (break open) cell • After lysis, soluble proteins can be easily separated from insoluble structural proteins
Procedure • Obtain 1mL cell culture in tube • Centrifuge for 5 min and identify location of red fluorescent protein • Remove supernatant with pipette • Add another 1mL of cell culture to tube and centrifuge for 5 min • Remove supernatant with pipette
Procedure • Tip tube and remove last bit of supernatant with pipette, without touching cell pellet • Add elution buffer and drag closed tube across tube rack to resuspend cells • Add lysis buffer and incubate cells overnight at room temperature to release proteins from the cells
Reasons for separation • Although the bacteria make a lot of red fluorescent protein, there are up to 1,000 other proteins in a living cell • Those other proteins might interfere with intended use of RFP or of any other protein you are isolating • Pharmaceutical companies require purified protein
Procedure • Centrifuge cells (be sure to balance), and remove supernatant with RFP • Add binding buffer to the supernatant • Add supernatant to column and drain • Add wash buffer to column and drain • Add elution buffer to column and collect RFP
Procedure • Always add liquids to the side of column • Never touch the resin with pipette • Drain until 2 mm of liquid is left above the column and never expose the resin to air • Wait until each solution has drained before adding another solution
Separation uses protein folding Unfolded Folded− hydrophobic areas covered
Amino acids’ electric charge • Proteins have hydrophobic and hydrophilic amino acids • Difference is electric charge distribution • Hydrophobic amino acids ARE NOT attracted to water molecules • Hydrophilic proteins ARE attracted to water molecules
Protein folding in binding buffer • In binding buffer, hydrophobic proteins unfold • Unfolded hydrophobic proteins adhere to the hydrophobic column resin • Folded hydrophilic proteins never adhere to the column Hydrophilic proteins
Protein folding in wash buffer • In wash buffer, moderately hydrophobic proteins fold • Highly hydrophobic proteins, including RFP, stay unfolded • Folded moderately hydrophobic proteins are released from the column Moderately hydrophobic proteins
Protein folding in elution buffer • In elution buffer, highly hydrophobic proteins, including RFP, fold • Folded highly hydrophobic proteins, including RFP, are released from the column • RFP can be collected RFP