BIOchemistry LAB Manual
BIOchemistry LAB Manual
BIOchemistry LAB Manual
Table of Contents
Introduction................................................................................................. Keeping a Laboratory Notebook............................................................. Laboratory Reports................................................................................... Experiment 1: Introduction to Techniques .................................. Use of pipetmen................................................................................. Spectroscopy and dilutions.............................................................. Analysis of experiment 1 results.................................................... Experiment 2: Protein Purification ................................................. Purification of LDH........................................................................... Purification of LDH (continued)..................................................... LDH Enzyme assays....................................................................... Protein assays................................................................................... Calculation hints: Purification table.............................................. Experiment 3: Characterization of LDH ........................................ SDS PAGE.......................................................................................... Western blotting................................................................................ Western blotting (continued)........................................................... Gel filtration chromatography........................................................ Gel filtration chromatography (continued)................................... Protein crystallography................................................................... Experiment 4: Enzyme Kinetics........................................................ Km determination.............................................................................. Lactate Km determination (continued)......................................... Pyruvate K m determination........................................................... Inhibition kinetics.............................................................................. Inhibitor type determination........................................................... Chemical modification of LDH........................................................ 4 6 8 17 17 20 25 26 33 37 41 44 46 48 48 57 62 66 71 73 77 87 90 92 94 100 102
Experiment 5: Cloning of LDH........................................................... PCR and plasmid preparation........................................................ Agarose gels and restriction digests.............................................. Ligation and transformation........................................................... Selection and screening.................................................................... Screening and sequencing................................................................ Activity measurements................................................................... Definitions .................................................................................................
Other useful Information: Biochemistry Stockroom: MH-277 Chemistry & Biochemistry Office: MH-580
arisen from previous experiments. Your task as a scientist will be to consider your data, and to attempt to interpret it. In this context, wrong answers are answers that are contradicted by your data or that do not arise logically from the data you have collected. This uncertainty as to the correct answer means that you must be careful when reporting what you did and what you observed, especially if you observe something unexpected. Humans are good at fooling themselves; you need to guard against reporting what you expect to see rather than what you actually did see. Scientific fraud, in which people intentionally report false data, is considered very serious because it results in a difficult-to-overcome belief in an answer that conflicts with the truth. You will occasionally see retractions, in which a scientist publishes a statement that information in a previously published paper is the result of an artifact, and is not a reflection of the correct answer. Avoiding the embarrassment of publishing a retraction is one reason for the care that people take in performing experiments and in interpreting the results. Another ethical issue is the proper citation of the sources of information you use for any scientific writing. You should always properly reference the authors of papers or books you consult. It also means that you should cite the inventors of methods that you use for your experiments. If you do not, you are, in effect, claiming credit for work performed by others.
At each step in your experiment (after each assay or measurement), in addition to the results, record your thoughts regarding the experiment and how you think it is going. Record your mistakes, and your attempts to rectify them. Record the calculations involved in any type of data analysis, as well as explanations for both what you did and what you think it means. A research project is a journey into the unknown; your laboratory notebook is usually your only guide through the forests of uncertainty. It is also a good idea to look over your notebook periodically during the semester, and make notes of things that you do not understand, so that you can ask questions before the lab reports are due. Do not say well, I will remember what this means; instead, write it down! Do not say I will remember what I was thinking while I did this experiment; instead, write it down ! If you use your lab notebook properly, you will find that writing your lab reports is much easier, and you will be developing good habits for the future.
Laboratory Report 3:
Title Page Introduction Abstract Materials and Methods Results (Laboratory Report 3 covers Experiments 2, 3, and 4)
The Final Laboratory Report is a revision of Report 3, and thus also covers Experiments 2, 3, and 4. Note that the results from Experiment 5 are not included in any of the laboratory reports; instead, you will report your results from Experiment 5 in a poster. All of the laboratory reports are expected to be well formatted, word-processed documents, written in standard scientific American English. The use of spell-checkers and grammar checkers is strongly recommended. (Note: the Appendix does not have to be as neatly formatted as the rest of the report, and, if necessary, may be handwritten.)
You should keep these general concepts for writing a paper in mind while considering the content of each section. The content of each section of a scientific paper is discussed below. (Remember that you will not write the paper in this order.) Title Page: This should include the title of your report, the authors name (i.e. your name), your lab partners name(s), and your address (your e-mail address is sufficient). Abstract: This should be a brief version of the entire paper. It therefore should include a brief introduction, methods, results, and discussion, expressed in ~200 words. This truncation is normally achieved in part by greatly abbreviating the methods portion, unless the methods involved are novel or are crucial to understanding the findings presented. Thousands of papers are published every week. Most literature database search engines include the title and abstract, but do not include the remainder of the paper. In writing the abstract, remember that the vast majority of readers probably will not read the paper, because they lack the time. Therefore, in order to present your information to the largest possible audience, you need to have an abstract that is clearly written, that is understandable without having to read the paper, and that contains all of the relevant findings from the paper. The abstract should end with the overall conclusions from the paper; once again, this is important because you want people to know what you have discovered. Your job/grant funding/promotions/fame and fortune/ability to do more experiments/ability to retire to the exotic locale of your choice may depend on having people understand what you have done. (This applies to the entire paper, but the abstract tends to be at least skimmed by vast numbers of people who will never read the paper.) Introduction: This section should include background information setting up the scientific problem you are attempting to address and the overall goal of the experiments you performed. What is the hypothesis you are testing? What directly relevant information is necessary to understand this hypothesis and why is it important? What is not known that you hope to address? What are you planning to attempt to accomplish? (Very briefly) How did you accomplish this? In writing an introduction, you are attempting to orient the readers, so that they will know what to consider as they read the rest of the paper. This means that you should carefully consider whether you are presenting information that is irrelevant or misleading. If you discuss an issue related to your protein in the introduction, the reader will expect you to address that issue in the remainder of your paper. In addition, after having read your introduction, the reader should have an appreciation of the questions you were attempting to address with your experiments and why these questions are important. If someone can read your introduction without wanting to read the rest of your paper to find the answer to the burning questions that you raised, you have not written your introduction properly! Methods: This section should be a concise summary of what you did. It should include enough detail so that any reasonably intelligent biochemist could repeat your work, 10
but not a minute-by-minute recitation of the hours you spent performing the experiment. One common mistake is to include information that belongs in the Results section; the Methods section is for methods. For example, a description of a protein assay should describe the procedure used, but generally should not include a list of the samples measured in the assay. On the other hand, a common mistake is to fail to include some methods, such as the techniques used to analyze the data obtained during the study. When most people read a paper, they tend to skip the Methods section unless they need to know exactly how an experiment was performed. This means that they will not read the Methods unless they do not believe your description in the Results section, or because they work in the field and want to see if you used a novel technique. Because many people skip the Methods section, the Methods section should only be a description of the methods used. With the possible exception of onetime events such as plasmid constructions, it is rarely a good idea to include results in the Methods section. If you do include results in the Methods section, these results should be at least summarized in the Results section also. The Methods section should also contain the source of the important reagents and identifying information for any equipment used. Because research reagents of high quality are available from many vendors, the precise source of most reagents is much less important than it once was. It is common practice, however, to state in the Methods section that, for example, the ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase expression vector was a generous gift of Dr. C. Meyer. Results: This section should be a description of what you did in words , illustrated with figures and tables. It is not enough merely to have several figures; you need to explain what each figure means. Try to avoid merely listing results in the text; instead, explain the findings and briefly fit them into the overall context of the paper. For each set of experiments, you need to consider the following questions: What are you doing? Why and how are you doing it? What was the rationale for the methods you employed? What is the point of the experiment you are about to describe? What strategy are you using to address the experimental question you are asking? None of your answers to the above questions should be lengthy, but you do need to consider these questions in writing your report. It may be totally obvious to you why you performed your brilliant experiment, but unless you explain the purpose and rationale behind the experiment, your flawless reasoning may not be obvious to your readers. Remember that you are telling a story to people who have not done the experiments. You cannot assume that the reader will know what you are doing and why. In addition, you are telling a story that people will be predisposed to disbelieve. You therefore need to present your information as clearly as possible. If you do so, people will (at worst) understand what they are criticizing, and (at best) see that you have put enough thought and effort into your work as to make it likely that you are trustworthy.
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What data do you need to report? Do not report data merely because it is available. Instead, report data to make a point. You are trying to tell a factual story. This means that you cannot lie to your readers. On the other hand, if you perform an irrelevant experiment, reporting the results may be confusing. For example, if you perform five SDS-PAGE electrophoresis experiments that show essentially the same results, you do not need to include the results of each individual gel. In reporting the results of an experiment that yielded numerical data, it is poor writing technique to simply list in the text the same values listed in a table or shown in a graph. The raw numbers are meaningless unless put into context. In other words, cite in the text only the important numbers, and explain why these values are important. For reporting numbers in the text, convert the numbers to reasonable values. A number such as 0.0014567 mg/l is not reasonable for two reasons: 1) converting the value to 1.4567 mg/ml results in a number that is much easier to read, and 2) the number of significant figures reported seems excessive (unless you really believe that your experiment was accurate to five significant figures). As an example, you will be writing a description of LDH purification and LDH enzyme assays in your first Results section. You should consider the following in writing this section. Purification: Why did you perform the purification? What strategy did you employ for the purification? Why did you use the steps you used and not others? During the purification, what step resulted in the greatest purification? When did you observe the LDH to elute from the column? Was this expected, unexpected, or did you have no basis for making a prediction? Is there a figure you could generate to clarify your results? (Is a figure necessary to clarify your results?) Based on your data, was your purification successful or unsuccessful? Why? Do you have any data other than foldpurification to indicate whether your purification was successful? How did your purification compare to literature values obtained for similar proteins? Characterization: Scientific research involves intelligent observation. In other words, you need to look at your data critically, and to attempt to understand everything it is telling you. Why did you run gel filtration chromatography or SDS PAGE on your protein sample? Simply looking at an SDS PAGE or gel filtration experiment as a method for determining the molecular weight of your protein may result in your missing important information about your protein. If you ran these experiments on a sample that you believe to be highly purified, you should examine the results and compare them to what you would expect to see for a completely homogeneous preparation (in other words, to a preparation containing zero contaminants). Thus, in examining a gel filtration chromatogram, do you see any unexpected peaks? For example, if you expect to have a single, monomeric protein, and you see two peaks on a chromatogram, you need to figure out which peak is your protein and which is a contaminant, how much of the contaminating material is present, where it came from (especially if it was not there previously), and whether it is necessary to perform additional purification steps. It is possible that the second peak is a loosely associated protein that interacts with your protein; in which case, you may be learning useful 12
information about your protein. Do you see evidence on an SDS PAGE on the same sample for similar contaminants? Why or why not? Enzyme assay : what can you learn from each enzyme assay? (If the answer is nothing, is it worth including these results in the paper?) How do you know that the assay results are valid? What assumptions are you making about the enzyme reaction actually occurring in the reaction tube? Are these assumptions likely to be correct for each assay? Are these assumptions likely to be correct for some assays but not for others? What controls did you run to ensure that the results were at least potentially meaningful? In some cases, the answers to the above questions do not need to be stated explicitly. However, you always need to consider the answers before writing the paper. Knowingly incorporating the results of a flawed experiment in a paper is a good way to lose grant funding or become unemployed, and may result in your finding yourself in court defending yourself in a lawsuit or in a criminal trial. This does not mean that experiments that later turn out to be less informative than you would like are useless, but merely means that you should look carefully at your data, and try to understand the validity of each experiment before mentioning it in a written document. Discussion: This section should begin with a brief summary of your results, and an explanation of what they mean. What were you hoping to accomplish? What did you discover as a result of your experiments? Which of your results are interesting? What can you say about your hypotheses now that you have additional data? What did you expect to see? Did you see what you expected? Did you find surprising results? At least in part, the Discussion section should be the section in which you answer the questions you raised in the Introduction. Sometimes the answer is that your original hypothesis turned out to be flawed; in this case, you point out how the data indicate the flaws, and propose a brilliant new hypothesis to account for your observations. Sometimes your original hypothesis is supported by the data, in which case you point out how your original brilliant concept predicted your results. You should end your discussion section with your conclusions. Did your experiment achieve your goals? How are your results going to change the world? Figures and figure legends: In writing a paper, figures can be extremely useful. They are rarely, however, self-explanatory. This means that you need to refer to the figure in the text. In addition, you need to include some relevant information in the figure legend, so that people simply glancing through the paper can derive useful information from the figures. As an example, in a figure of a gel, you should indicate the identity of the samples loaded in the figure legend. If more than one band is present in an important lane, it is often a good idea to highlight the important band in some way. (Note: in doing so, do not write on the actual lane; instead, place an arrow or other marker beside the gel, or beside the lane.)
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Designing figures requires considerable thought. What point are you trying to make with the figure? Is the point necessary? If the point is a necessary one, how can the figure be used to make the point as clear as possible? Can you design a figure to present more information, or present the information more clearly? Figure legends can be extremely useful in allowing you to present relevant information that would disrupt the orderly flow of ideas in the text. The figure legends are also necessary in clarifying the information presented in the figure. References : In any scholarly endeavor, it is customary to give credit to your sources of information. The Reference section allows you to properly credit the originators of the information you are presenting. Where did your introductory information come from? Where did your methods come from? (Note that, unless you invented the method, you should always reference the paper that first described the work.) Acknowledgments: In scientific papers, it is customary to thank the agency that funded the research. In addition, it is polite to acknowledge gifts of reagents or other supplies. Note that, if you purchased the reagent, the source of the reagent should be cited in the Methods section. Appendix: Finally, the report should contain an appendix that contains your raw data and the calculations that you used to reduce your data to understandable form. In a real paper, Appendix sections are only included for the description of novel calculations; in this course, the Appendix is included so that your lab instructor can correct your calculation mistakes. In each section, attempt to organize the information you are presenting logically. Scientific papers are written for intelligent people who have not done the experiments you are describing. If your report is disorganized they may not understand it. If you do not write well, the reader will not believe your conclusions. (In the real world, a poorly written paper will not be published, and you will not get grant funding! In this class, if you instructor does not believe your conclusions, you will not get a good grade.) The list of questions below is designed to help you write each section of the report correctly. Reading over this list of questions before writing a draft of the report is strongly recommended. Reading these questions after writing your first draft, and using the questions to guide your revisions is also strongly recommended. Criteria for Judging Lab Reports: General: Does it contain the required sections? Is it clearly written? Does it use scientific terms properly? Does it use good grammar? Are the words spelled correctly? Are the calculations performed correctly? 14
Is it unnecessarily long? Is the title meaningful? Does the title page contain the authors name and address? Does the title page contain the name(s) of the authors lab partners? Abstract: Does it introduce the overall topic? Does it explain the hypothesis being tested? Are the important methods described? Does it reach logical conclusions supported by the data? Does it flow well? Is it logically written? Is it concise? Introduction: Does it give general background? Does it point out poorly understood or unknown factors related to the study? Does it raise questions? Does it explain the hypothesis being tested? Does it discuss the significance of the work? Does it flow well? Is it logically written? Is it concise? Materials and Methods: Could the experiments be understood based on the information given? Does it include the source of the reagents? Does it include information that belongs in the Results section? Does it describe all of the methods used? Is it excessively long? Results: Does it explain the rationale and strategy for the experiments performed? Does it describe, in words, what was done? Does it answer the questions raised in the Introduction? Does it flow well? Is it logically written? Is it concise? Discussion: Does it summarize the findings obtained in the Results section? Does it discuss the expected results? Does it discuss the unexpected results? Does it answer the questions raised in the Introduction? Does it reach conclusions? Does it explain why the conclusions are important? Does it flow well? Is it logically written? Is it concise? Figures: Are the figures well designed? Do the figures include informative legends? Do the figures present information useful for understanding the text? Tables: Are the tables well designed? 15
Do the tables present information useful for understanding the text? Is the information in the tables redundant? Acknowledgments: Are the sources of funding given credit? References: Is the information obtained from published sources properly referenced? Appendix: Are the raw data and the calculations included?
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cases, however, such as for organic solvents, or for solutions containing large amounts of protein, it is often difficult to get all of the liquid out of the tip. In these cases, it is best to wet the tip, by pipetting the original solution once, expelling it, and then taking up the liquid a second time.) Although pipetmen are tremendously useful, they have a potential drawback. If used improperly, pipetmen will transfer inaccurate volumes. In addition, pipetmen may lose calibration. If used incautiously, therefore, pipetmen may yield misleading or even totally useless results. Checking the calibration of pipetmen is a simple procedure that can save considerable time, energy, and reagents. In this experiment, you will learn how to use pipetmen of various sizes and measure their accuracy, precision, and calibration. Experimental Procedures Materials Pipetmen Pipet tips Water Balances Weigh Boats Methods For each Pipetman you will want to check the accuracy and precision over the entire range using at least two different volumes (for example: if you are using a P1000 you will want to check 300 l and 1000 l). Accuracy is a measure of proximity to the true value or the expected value for a measurement. Precision is a measure of reproducibility. For example, obtaining weights of 0.5, 1.0, and 1.5 grams for a P1000 set for 1000 l would be accurate, but not precise; obtaining 0.67, 0.68, and 0.67 g for the same setting would be precise, but not accurate. 1. Acquire Pipetmen and the correct size tips. 2. Place a weigh boat on the balance and tare the weight to zero. 3. Draw up the designated volume of deionized water into the pipet tip and dispense it onto the weigh boat. Record the weight of the water added. 4. Repeat the procedure twice for each volume (yielding a total of three weights for each volume). The P20 uses very small volumes, which have very small weights. In order to obtain accurate readings with the relatively low precision balances available, you may need to pipet the volume of water several times (5 or 10 times is recommended) for each volume being tested. For example, pipet 10 l 10 times in succession, and record the weight of the 100 l total volume as one measurement. Analyze the data you collect as described in the section on data reduction (below). 18
2. You have a 0.5 M stock solution of Tris base. How would you make 100 ml of 0.03 M Tris base? 3. If you perform a 1:4 dilution on 50 mM Tris base, what is the final concentration? 4. Is the extinction coefficient for a molecule the same for all wavelengths? 5. You prepare several dilutions of an unknown compound. You measure the absorbance of each solution at 340 nm using a 1 cm cuvette (your results are listed in the table below). What is the extinction coefficient (in (M cm)-1) of the compound? (Hint: assume that each of the individual values contains some degree of experimental error.) Concentration Absorbance at (M) 340 nm 2 0.009 4 0.020 8 0.061 16 0.111 32 0.189
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Some cuvettes are designed for visible light only. When the spectrophotometer is set for ultraviolet wavelengths (wavelengths of 340 nm or less) make sure that your cuvette does not have a large absorbance when it contains only water. The term spectroscopy comes from the word spectrum which originally referred to the multiple colors of light apparent in an analysis of white light using a prism. Spectroscopy therefore implies the use of multiple wavelengths of light. Spectrophotometers have the ability to specifically measure absorbance at specific wavelengths. The most commonly used method to allow this involves a monochromator, a device (either a prism, or more commonly, a diffraction grating) that splits the incident light into its component wavelengths, and allows only light of the desired wavelength to reach the sample. The ability to measure absorbance at different wavelengths is very useful, because the extinction coefficient of a compound varies with wavelength. In addition, the absorbance spectrum of a compound can vary dramatically depending on the chemical composition of the compound, and depending on the environment (such as the solvent) around the compound. The graph at right shows the absorbance spectrum of a protein. The protein has a strong absorbance peak near 280 nm, but exhibits very little absorbance at longer wavelengths. For this protein, the only chromophores (chemical groups within a compound that absorb light) are the aromatic amino acids tryptophan and tyrosine. For many proteins, these two residues are the only chromophores; because tryptophan and tyrosine only absorb in the ultraviolet portion of the spectrum, such proteins are colorless molecules. Colored proteins, such as hemoglobin, exhibit their color due to chromophores (heme, in the case of hemoglobin) that absorb in the visible portion of the spectrum. The extinction coefficient of a molecule at a given wavelength can be calculated using the Beer-Lambert equation from absorbance measurements for solutions of known concentration. Dilutions Many solutions used in biochemistry are prepared by the dilution of a more concentrated stock solution. In preparing to make a dilution (or series of dilutions), you need to consider the goal of the procedure. This means that you need to consider
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both the desired final concentration and required volume of the diluted material. A simple equation allows the dilution to be calculated readily: C1V1 = C2V2 where C1 is the concentration of the initial solution; V1 is the volume of the initial solution available to be used for dilution (this may not be the total volume of the initial solution, and instead may be a small fraction of the initial solution), C2 is the desired final concentration, and V2 is the desired final volume. In most cases, the initial concentration and the final concentration are either known or are chosen in order to work correctly in the experiment being planned. The final volume is usually an amount that is chosen based on the amount required for a given experiment. This means that at least three of the required terms are either known or can be chosen by the experimenter. Let us consider an example. You are setting up a standard curve. You have a stock solution of 1000 g/ml BSA, and for one of the points on the curve, you want 200 l of 20 g/ml. In this case, C1 = 1000 g/ml; C2 = 20 g/ml, and V2 = 200 l. This leaves V 1 as the unknown value (i.e. how much of the stock solution must be diluted to 200 l final volume to yield the desired concentration). Rearranging the dilution equation gives: C 20 g/ml V1 = V2 2 and therefore 4 l = 200 l 1000 g/ml C
Thus, you need to dilute 4 l of the stock solution to a final volume of 200 l (i.e. by adding 196 l). If, in the example, you wished to make a solution of 1 g/ml, the same equation would indicate that you need 0.2 l of the 1000 g/ml stock solution for 200 l of the final diluted sample. This is a problem: 0.2 l is very difficult to measure accurately. You have two choices: change the final volume (i.e. if V2 is larger, then V1 must also increase), or perform serial dilutions ( i.e. instead of diluting the stock solution by a factor of 1000 in one step, dilute the stock solution, and then make a further dilution of the diluted stock). In many cases, while the final concentration is important, the final volume is not (as in the previous paragraph). In these cases, do what was explained in this example: use a convenient dilution: a dilution that involves volumes that are easily pipetted. Pipetting 1.3333 l is usually less accurate than pipetting 4 l, both because 4 l is a larger volume, and because it is difficult to set the pipet for 1.3333 l. In this case, 4 l is a convenient volume, while 1.3333 l is not. In some cases, you may not know the actual starting concentration. If, for example, you need to measure the enzyme activity in a sample, and you find that the activity is too high to measure accurately, you will need to dilute the starting material. Since you dont know the actual starting concentration, all you know is the concentration ratio between starting and final solutions. As long as you keep track of the
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concentration ratio in all of your dilutions, you can easily determine the enzyme activity in the initial solution, even though you cannot measure it directly. Concentration ratios are frequently of considerable value. For example, you have a stock solution of buffer that contains 450 mM Tris-HCl, 10 mM EDTA, and 500 mM NaCl. You actually wish to use a final concentration of 45 mM Tris-HCl, 1 mM EDTA, and 50 mM NaCl. In each case the concentration of the final buffer is onetenth that of the original. Simply performing a 1:10 dilution of the stock solution then gives the appropriate final concentration of each component. The stock solution of buffer is typically called a 10x stock, because it is ten-times more concentrated than the final, useful buffer. Note, in the previous paragraph, the 1:10 dilution. The description uses the chemistry convention for this term, which will be used throughout this course. The 1:10 dilution mentioned is performed by taking one part of the initial solution, and adding nine parts of solvent (usually water). This results in a final concentration that is ten-fold lower than the original. In this experiment, you will learn how to prepare solutions using dilutions, and learn how to use a spectrophotometer. Experimental Procedures Materials Pipetmen Pipet tips Parafilm Water 1.0 M CuSO4 solution UV cuvettes Vis cuvettes Quartz cuvettes Unknown CuSO4 solution 10 mM N-acetyl-tryptophanamide solution
Simple Dilutions-1 1. Set the spectrophotometer to wavelength 700 nm and blank against air. 2. Prepare 1 ml of the following dilutions of the CuSO4 solution using water: 1:2, 1:5, 1:10, 1:50, and 1:100. 3. Determine the A700 for each dilution.
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Simple Dilutions-2 4. Assuming the CuSO4 solution is a 5X stock, prepare the following solutions: 0.5X, 1X, 2X. 5. Determine the A700 for each dilution. Serial Dilutions 6. Prepare the following solutions of the CuSO4 solution using serial dilutions: 1:5, 1:25, 1:125, and 1:625 7. Determine the A700 for each dilution. Experimental applications Measure the A700 for different dilutions of the unknown CuSO4 solutions. Spectroscopy 1. Perform a baseline blank measurement for an absorbance spectrum from 250 to 400 nm with the cuvette chamber empty. 2. Perform absorbance scans on the different types of cuvettes containing only water. Which cuvettes do you need to use to measure absorbance accurately in this wavelength range? 3. Perform an absorbance scan of 200 M N-acetyl-tryptophanamide. 4. Prepare dilutions of the N-acetyl-tryptophanamide and measure the absorbance at an appropriate wavelength.
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Use of Pipetmen Set up a table and answer the following six questions for each volume measured: 1. Record the weight you measured for the three trials. 2. Average the three weights. 3. Calculate standard deviation for your average.1 4. What is the standard deviation as a percent of the average value? 5. Is the Pipetman accurate at this volume? 6. Is the Pipetman precise at this volume? Do the accuracy and precision vary over the range of volumes for the Pipetmen? Simple Dilutions-1 1. Give the volume of water and CuSO4 solution used for each sample dilution. 2. Plot the results on an A700 vs. Concentration of CuSO4 solution graph. 3. Calculate the extinction coefficient for aqueous CuSO4 solution. Simple Dilutions-2 1. Give the volume of water and CuSO4 solution used for each simple dilution. 2. Plot the results on an A700 vs. Concentration of CuSO4 solution graph. 3. Calculate the extinction coefficient for aqueous CuSO4 solution. Serial Dilutions 1. Describe how each serial dilution was prepared. 2. Plot the results on an A700 vs. Concentration of CuSO4 solution graph. 3. Calculate the extinction coefficient for aqueous CuSO4 solution. Absorbance Results 1. Report the average value and standard deviation for the extinction coefficient of CuSO4 at 700 nm based on your data. 2. Estimate the concentration of the unknown CuSO4 solutions based on your data. 3. What do the results for the CuSO4 indicate anything about the instrument used for the measurements (such as the minimum or maximum absorbance values that yield reliable results)? 4. At what wavelength does N-acetyl tryptophanamide exhibit maximal absorbance? 5. What is the extinction coefficient for N-acetyl tryptophanamide at this wavelength?
1Standard
deviation
(x
i =1
x)
n 1
where
the number of measurements. Most calculators and all spreadsheets will calculate standard deviation. Note, however, that some spreadsheets also have algorithms for population standard deviation (in which the denominator is n rather than n 1). The use of population standard deviation is inappropriate for these data. In Excel, the correct function is STDEV(cell range)
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Ammonium sulfate precipitation In many cases, cell lysates can be loaded directly onto chromatography columns. However, in some cases other molecules present in the lysate interfere with binding of the protein to the resin. In addition, some resins (especially affinity resins and sepharose-based resins) are fairly expensive; loading crude cell lysates on these columns may result in binding of cellular material (e.g. lipids and DNA) that are difficult to remove, and which may damage the column. As a result, purification methods often begin with one of several possible simple techniques that remove at least some of these unwanted materials prior to using an expensive column. One of the most commonly used crude purification techniques involves the use of differential solubility. Proteins precipitate with increasing ammonium sulfate concentrations, with most proteins precipitating somewhere between 10% and 60% ammonium sulfate. (The percentages are relative to a saturated solution, which has a concentration of about 4 M; thus most proteins precipitate between 0.4 M and 2.4 M.) This can allow a simple, partial, purification of a protein; if the protein of interest precipitates at 40% ammonium sulfate, many other proteins will remain in solution, as will many other non-protein molecules. Most proteins are not damaged by ammonium sulfate precipitation, and can be resuspended in a small volume of buffer. Ammonium sulfate precipitation results in a high salt concentration in the protein solution; this may be advantageous (if the intended next step is hydrophobic interaction chromatography), or deleterious (if the next step is ion exchange chromatography). When necessary, two methods are frequently used to remove the salt. One method is gel filtration chromatography (discussed briefly below, and in more detail in Experiment 3D). Another frequently used method is dialysis. Dialysis Dialysis involves placing the protein solution in a semipermeable membrane, and placing the membrane in a large container of buffer. Small molecules (such as salt ions) pass through the dialysis membrane (moving from high concentration to low concentration), while large molecules are unable to cross the membrane. Dialysis membranes come in a variety of pore sizes, and are therefore useful for removing a variety of different sized solutes. In principle, dialysis could allow separation of large proteins from small ones; in practice, however, the pores in the tubing are insufficiently uniform to allow this technique to be used effectively. Chromatographic methods Most purification methods involve chromatography. Chromatographic methods involve a column of an insoluble material that can bind molecules based on specific properties common to proteins. The solution containing the mixture of proteins is then allowed to pass through the column; the protein of interest may bind (depending on its properties), while at least some impurities remain in solution and leave the column. The procedure is completed by eluting (i.e. removing) the proteins that have 27
An illustration of a chromatographic run is shown above. The initial sample contains five different proteins (the differently colored filled circles). These proteins are bound to the column fairly tightly. Once elution begins, the proteins begin leaving the column. The graph at the bottom of the diagram shows proteins eluting with increasing salt concentration, in the manner that would occur with an ion exchange column; otherwise, this diagram applies to essentially any type of chromatographic method. Note: most columns do not run this neatly, especially in the beginning of a purification procedure. Ion exchange chromatography: Proteins are charged molecules. Electrostatic forces will therefore allow proteins to bind to other molecules of opposite charge. Ion exchange columns are produced by covalently attaching charged molecules such as diethyl-aminoethyl (DEAE) groups to insoluble carbohydrate resins. In many cases, small differences in charge can result in significant separations on ion exchange columns. Ion exchange columns are typically loaded at low ionic strength, and the protein removed by raising the ionic strength. 28
Hydrophobic interaction chromatography: Proteins contain hydrophobic amino acid sidechains, some of which are exposed at the surface of the protein. Proteins will therefore often bind to other hydrophobic molecules. Hydrophobic interaction columns are produced by covalently attaching hydrophobic molecules such as acyl chains or phenyl groups to insoluble carbohydrate resins. The hydrophobic effect is strongest under high ionic strength conditions; hydrophobic interaction columns are therefore typically loaded at high ionic strength, and the protein removed by lowering the ionic strength (thus, these columns are the opposite of ion exchange columns). Gel filtration chromatography: In gel filtration chromatography (also known as size exclusion, gel permeation, or molecular sieve chromatography), Bead molecules are separated based on size. Gel filtration columns are made of porous beads packed into a column. Different types of beads have somewhat different physical properties that may make them more appropriate for different proteins. As a solution containing molecules of varying sizes passes through the column, the molecules distribute between the inside and outside of the pores depending on their size. Molecules too big for the pores are totally excluded, and elute from the column first. Smaller molecules fit in the pores, and therefore elute later. The elution volume for a molecule is thus inversely related to the size of the molecule. Because salts such as ammonium sulfate are much smaller than proteins, gel filtration is frequently used as a method for removing salt from a protein solution. Affinity Chromatography: Many proteins exhibit specific interactions with other molecules (called ligands); for example, enzymes must have the ability to bind to their substrates, and antibodies exhibit high-affinity interactions with their antigens. In
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principle, it is possible to covalently attach the ligand to an insoluble resin. A column produced from such a resin is called an affinity column. Affinity chromatography is somewhat less commonly used than the forms of chromatography discussed above. In many cases, the covalent attachment of the ligand to the column results in steric clashes that prevent the protein from binding. In some cases, although the protein will bind to the affinity resin, the resin is so expensive that other purification methods are used instead. In addition, bacteria find most affinity columns to be admirable growth media, with consequent deleterious effects on the chromatographic usefulness of the columns. On the other hand, affinity chromatography can be extremely useful for rapidly purifying proteins. While most proteins contain the charged groups that can interact with ion exchange resins, the specificity of protein-ligand interactions means that only a very small fraction of the proteins in a cell will bind to any given affinity resin. Affinity chromatography can therefore be an extremely useful purification technique; in some cases, a single affinity chromatography step may be the only step necessary to completely purify a protein. Protein Purification Strategies Developing a scheme for purifying a protein remains an empirical process. However, in purifying a new protein, it is sometimes possible to adapt methods used for purifying similar proteins. In addition, planning the procedure before simply trying different methods can be extremely useful. Examples of this include using an ammonium sulfate precipitation step before a hydrophobic interaction chromatography step, because the high concentration of ammonium sulfate that results from the precipitation will allow the precipitated protein (or the nonprecipitated protein remaining in solution) to be loaded directly onto the column. In contrast, an ammonium sulfate precipitated protein must be dialyzed (or otherwise desalted) prior to loading on an ion exchange column. Another frequently used scheme involves an inexpensive technique such as ammonium sulfate precipitation prior to remove bulk contaminants prior to running a higher resolution but more expensive technique such as affinity chromatography. As with most scientific procedures, the more you know about the protein, and the more you know about protein purification, the more likely it is that you will be able to design a successful purification procedure. Buffers Proteins, and especially enzymes, are generally quite sensitive to changes in the concentrations of various solution components. A buffer is a solution that is used to control the properties of a process occurring in an experimental aqueous medium. The term buffer is related to the ability of these solutions to resist changes in the hydrogen ion concentration, but buffers also contain other molecules, and are used to attempt to influence the ionic strength, the activity of proteases, and other parameters of the experiment in addition to the hydrogen ion concentration.
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In any biochemistry experiment, the buffer components must be chosen based on their effect on the experiment. Ideal buffer components control pH and ionic strength without interacting in other ways with the system being studied. For example, while phosphate is a common physiological buffer, it may not be appropriate for some biochemical experiments, especially if phosphate is a substrate or product of the reaction being studied. In addition, some proteins interact poorly with some buffer components (a fact usually discovered by trial and error). As an example, Tris is less than ideal because of its high pKa and the large change in pK a that it exhibits upon changes in temperature. However, Tris is inexpensive, most proteins are stable in Tris buffers, and Tris rarely reacts with biological compounds; as a result, Tris is commonly used in biochemistry. You will have seen the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation in previous courses. This equation is useful for calculating the theoretical pH of a solution. It is also useful for predicting whether a particular compound will be useful as a buffer over a given pH range. However, the Henderson-Hasselbalch equation has its drawbacks. Many buffers used in biochemical experiments deviate significantly from ideal HendersonHasselbalch behavior. [A ] pH = pKa + log Henderson-Hasselbalch equation [ HA ] Because of the commonly observed deviations from ideal behavior, buffers are typically prepared by adding the buffer components to a container, adjusting the solution to the desired pH by adding an acid or a base, and then adding sufficient water to reach the expected final volume. For example, a 1 liter of 50 mM Tris-HCl buffer (pH 7.4) with 200 mM sodium chloride would be prepared by adding 50 mmoles of Tris base and 200 mmoles of sodium chloride to a flask and adding water to about 900 ml. HCl would then be added to reduce the pH to 7.4, using a pH meter to monitor the changing pH, followed by addition of enough water to yield a 1 liter final volume. (If the solution contained 1 liter before addition of the HCl, the final volume would be more than 1 liter, and therefore the buffer would be less concentrated than it should be.) Note that in order to produce most biochemically useful buffers, several components must be added together. This frequently requires careful consideration of the necessary dilutions for each of the components. When performing experiments with proteins, it is rarely a good idea to dilute the protein with water, unless denaturation of the protein is not a concern. When denaturation is a concern, such as when performing dilutions for enzyme assays, perform the dilution using a suitable buffer to prevent undesirable alterations in the structure of the protein in solution.
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LDH is found in almost all organisms because it plays an important role in carbohydrate metabolism. During conditions in which pyruvate production from glycolysis exceeds the ability of the cell to metabolize the pyruvate, LDH converts the pyruvate to lactate, and thereby regenerates the oxidized NAD required for further glycolysis. LDH also allows the conversion of lactate to pyruvate; both the pyruvate and NADH produced can then be used for other processes. In most animal tissues, LDH is produced from two genes, designated A and B. The A gene is somewhat more highly expressed in muscle and liver, and its product is referred to as the M isozyme, while the B gene is more highly expressed in heart, and its gene product is referred to as the H isozyme. In most species, the gene products form tetrameric complexes with properties that vary somewhat depending on the relative amounts of the different isozymes present in the tetramer. LDH activity is readily measurable: the extinction coefficient at 340 nm of NADH is much higher than that of NAD. If the only substrates added to the reaction are NAD and lactate (or NADH and pyruvate), the change in absorbance at 340 nm should be proportional to the change in NADH concentration due to the LDH activity present in the cuvette. As mentioned in the introduction to this section, in any protein purification protocol it is necessary to take advantage of the way in which the protein of interest (in this case, LDH) differs from the other proteins in the mixture. Most tissues contain thousands of proteins; you need to use the properties of LDH to separate it from all of the other proteins present. Most tissues contain proteases (enzymes that degrade other proteins). Avoiding proteolytic damage to your protein can be difficult. Three techniques are commonly used to keep proteolysis to a minimum: 1) perform the purification in the presence of protease inhibitors, 2) perform the purification at low temperatures (4C or on ice), and 3) perform the purification in the minimal amount of time possible. Because you cannot do the last of these (the purification procedure will take more than one lab period), you should keep your sample on ice or in the refrigerator as much as possible.
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Definitions Tris-(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane hydrochloride (Tris-HCl) is a commonly used buffer, and is intended to help control the pH of the solution. Tris is inexpensive and generally inert in biochemical experiments. These advantages somewhat compensate for its drawbacks. One drawback is the high pKa value of 8.1 at 25 C, a value that is well above the normal pH of biochemical buffers. Another drawback is the fact that the pKa of Tris changes by 0.031 pH units per C, and therefore the pH of a Tris-buffered solution is very temperature-dependent. 2-Mercaptoethanol ( -ME) is a reducing agent; it prevents formation of disulfide bonds between free cysteine residues. It also inhibits some proteases. Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) is an irreversible inhibitor of serine proteases. PMSF is toxic; avoid getting PMSF on your skin. Ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) is a chelating agent; it is used to remove metal ions from solution. Some proteases are dependent on metal ions (especially calcium ions), so EDTA acts as an inhibitor of some proteases. Reagents Extraction Buffer: 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4) 1 mM 2-Mercaptoethanol 1 mM Phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF) 1 mM Ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid (EDTA) Ammonium sulfate (solid) Chicken breast muscle Cheesecloth 50 ml Centrifuge Tubes (four per group) Blender Microcentrifuge Tubes (1.5 ml) Pipet Tips 50-ml Falcon Tubes Procedure 1. Tissue preparation Cut ~50 g of muscle tissue from the tissue source (record the exact weight of tissue used). Cut the tissue into small pieces with scalpel or razor blades. Discard the connective tissue and fat. 2. Soluble protein extraction Place the minced tissue and 75 ml of cold Extraction Buffer in a blender, and put the top on the blender. Disrupt the tissue by 34
homogenizing. Use 4 x 30 second bursts, with at least 10 seconds in between each burst to allow the temperature of the homogenate to decrease. 3. Centrifugation Put the homogenized tissue/buffer mixture into four pre-chilled 50 ml centrifuge tubes (note: the mixture will be the consistency of a thick milk shake, so a spatula will help). Balance the tubes (i.e. make sure that each pair of tubes have the same mass). Make sure that the tubes are not too full (you do not want to spill your mixture inside the rotor). Centrifuges are dangerous and expensive. Consult your instructor before putting your samples into the centrifuge! Centrifuge your homogenate for 20 minutes at 15,000 rpm.
4. Filtration Pour the supernatant (i.e. the fluid on top) through two layers of cheesecloth into a pre-chilled beaker. The cheesecloth removes lipids from the solution; the filtration step is much easier if you put the cheesecloth into a funnel). Discard the cell debris pellets (consult your instructor as to where to put the pellet so that the smell of rotting chicken fragments will not offend people). Measure and record the volume of the supernatant. Save three 0.5 ml aliquots (label the aliquots Crude Homogenate). 5. Ammonium sulfate precipitation Slowly (over a period of ~15 minutes) add 0.39 grams of ammonium sulfate per ml of supernatant to your filtered supernatant. It is best to perform this step in the cold room on a magnetic stirrer (obviously, you need to put a stir bar into your sample). Avoid stirring too violently (proteins denature if subjected to shearing stresses; if you see bubbles forming, you are denaturing your proteins). Stir for an additional 15 minutes after you finish adding the ammonium sulfate (this gives the ammonium sulfate a chance to dissolve, and allows the proteins a chance to equilibrate to the presence of the ammonium sulfate). (Ammonium sulfate precipitates proteins. Different proteins precipitate at different concentrations of ammonium sulfate. You are using 60% ammonium sulfate; this means that the amount of ammonium sulfate you are adding is 60% of the maximum amount of ammonium sulfate that will go into solution. Most, although not all, proteins precipitate at 60% ammonium sulfate.) 6. Centrifugation Centrifuge the sample (as before). Pour the supernatant into a separate container while keeping the pellet in the centrifuge tube. Save both supernatant and pellet in the refrigerator until the next lab period. The LDH should be in the pellet.
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6. You have stock solutions of 1 M Tris base, 1 M HCl, 0.2 M 2-mercaptoethanol, 0.1 M PMSF, and 0.5 M EDTA. How would you make up 200 ml of extraction buffer? Extraction buffer:10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 7.4), 1 mM 2-Mercaptoethanol, 1 mM PMSF and 1 mM EDTA.
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buffer, and load 3 ml of the mixture on the desalting column. Allow the liquid to drain to the frit. Discard the flow through. 3. Elute the protein from the desalting column Add 4 ml Tris-PMSF buffer to the column, and collect the flow through (this contains your LDH protein, so keep it on ice). 4. Measure and record the volume of the flow through. (Note: if you ran more than one desalting columns, combine the flow through eluents in a single tube, and measure the total volume.) 5. Save three 0.1 ml aliquots of the flow through eluent (label them desalted ammonium sulfate fraction). The Cibacron Blue column is an affinity column. It specifically binds dehydrogenasetype proteins (a compound structurally similar to NADH is covalently attached to the column). You are using the column to separate the LDH from the other proteins in the mixture. What you want to do is add the mixture to the column, and then sequentially remove: 1) all proteins that do not bind to the column, 2) all proteins that bind loosely to the column, and finally, 3) the LDH from the column. Proteins, NAD, and NADH absorb at 280 nm. You can determine whether at least one of these materials is present in the eluent from the Cibacron blue column by measuring the absorbance of the fractions. Blank the spectrophotometer against air. Read the absorbance of a cuvette with Tris-PMSF buffer in it (the absorbance should be about 0.4). Read the absorbance of your Cibacron blue column fractions: if the absorbance is less than ~0.1 above the absorbance of the Tris-PMSF buffer, go on to the next step. After reading the absorbance, put the sample back in the same tube, cover the tube with parafilm, and store the tube on ice. Sequentially label about twenty 13 x 100 mm test tubes. As you are running the column, you will be collecting fractions. Carefully note which fractions correspond to each part of the procedure. 6. Load Cibacron Blue Column After saving the aliquots, load the remaining desalted protein solution onto the Cibacron Blue column. Begin collecting 5 ml fractions. 7. Tris-PMSF Wash #1 When all of the liquid has entered the column (i.e. has drained to the frit), fill the column with Tris-PMSF buffer, and continue collecting 5 ml fractions. Measure absorbance at 280 nm until it is less than ~0.1 above the absorbance of the Tris-PMSF buffer. (The absorbance is due primarily to proteins washing off the column.) 8. NAD Wash After removing the remaining Tris-PMSF buffer with a pipet, add 10 ml NAD buffer to the column (note: make sure that you use NAD, and not NADH buffer at this step). Continue collecting 5 ml fractions. 38
8. Tris-PMSF Wash #2 When all of the liquid has entered the column (i.e. has drained to the frit), fill the column with Tris-PMSF buffer, and continue collecting 5 ml fractions. Measure absorbance at 280 nm until it is less than ~0.1 above the absorbance of the Tris-PMSF buffer. (The absorbance is primarily due to NAD washing off the column.) 9. NADH Wash After removing the remaining Tris-PMSF buffer with a pipet, add 10 ml NADH buffer to the column. Continue collecting 5 ml fractions. 10. Tris-PMSF Wash #3 When all of the liquid has entered the column (i.e. has drained to the frit), add Tris-PMSF buffer to the column, and continue collecting 5 ml fractions. Measure absorbance at 280 nm until it is less than ~0.1 above the absorbance of the Tris-PMSF buffer. 11. Cover all of the fractions with parafilm (if you have not already done so), and store them in the refrigerator (at 4C) until the next class.
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Bicarbonate Stock Solution 18 mM NaHCO 3 0.5 M NaCl Tris buffer for Enzyme Dilution 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6) 0.5 mM 2-Mercaptoethanol Cuvettes Procedure Note: NAD and NADH are expensive, and are consequently in somewhat short supply. Please try to avoid wasting reagents; using excessive amounts may mean that you run out of one of the reagents before the end of the lab period. You need to run assays to determine the LDH activity on the following samples: Crude homogenate Desalted ammonium sulfate fraction Peak fraction(s) from the Cibacron Blue column 1. Mix 0.6 ml Lactate Stock Solution, 0.4 ml NAD Stock Solution, and 0.2 ml Bicarbonate Stock Solution in a cuvette. 2. Add 10 l of the solution to be tested for LDH activity, and mix by inverting the cuvette. This initiates the reaction; you should therefore only add the enzyme when you are prepared to actually use the spectrophotometer. 3. Place the cuvette in the spectrophotometer and begin collecting data. 4. Have the spectrophotometer calculate the rate (in A/min), and record the value. (Note: is the rate linear? Are the absorbance values under 2? If the answer to either of these questions is no, you will need to make a dilution of your LDH solution, and repeat the assay. Do not dilute (or discard) all of your Cibacron Blue Peak fraction(s); you will need the concentrated solution(s) for later experiments. 5. Calculate the LDH activity in mol/min in the cuvette, and mol/min/ml in the original (i.e. undiluted) enzyme solution. You should do this today, so that if you have problems with the calculations, you can get help before you start work on your lab reports.
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5. You perform a Bradford assay. You obtain the absorbance values listed below from the BSA samples; your protein sample yields an absorbance of 1.3; what is the protein concentration of your sample? BSA (g/ml) Absorbance 0 0.5 25 0.65 50 0.8 75 0.95 100 1.1 150 1.4 200 1.75
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Your plot of the absorbance at 595 nm versus protein concentration should look similar to the one shown at right (your data may not fit the line as closely as these do, although they will if you are careful with your dilutions).
You will also need to dilute your LDH purification protein solutions. You will prefer to use small volumes of your precious protein solutions (you worked hard to prepare those protein solutions, and you will need them again for later experiments). You will find that most, if not all of the samples you have will be too concentrated to run undiluted in the assay. If you dilute the initial sample 1:10 (i.e. 30 l sample + 270 l of H 2O), and then prepare several 1:3 serial dilutions from this sample, eventually you will obtain samples that fall within the standard curve. (Reminder: serial dilutions are performed by diluting a sample, then taking an aliquot from the diluted sample and diluting it further, and then taking an aliquot from the second dilution and diluting it further, and . . . .) You will need to make sure that at least one of your diluted protein samples has an absorbance that falls within the standard curve. Once you have found a useful dilution for each of your important samples, repeat the dilution, and assay the sample again. This is called performing a replicate; the replicates will allow you to determine the protein concentration in your samples with more confidence. You need to run assays to determine the protein concentration on the following samples: Crude homogenate Desalted ammonium sulfate fraction Peak fraction(s) from the Cibacron Blue column Once you have measured the absorbance values for the standard curve and for your unknown protein samples, you will need to use the standard curve to determine the protein concentrations for your unknowns. The best method is to plot the values obtained for the standard curve, determine the slope of the best-fit line, and then use the equation of the line to give you the protein concentrations for your unknown samples. (Dont forget to correct the value obtained in this method for the dilution you performed -- your goal is to calculate the protein concentration in the initial sample.)
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In the equation above, 6220 M-1cm-1 is the extinction coefficient of NADH. The cuvette volume (which must be in liters) is the total volume of solution in the cuvette, and is used to correct from molarity to moles. You will be using 10 l of the enzyme, but you wish to correct to per ml of enzyme, and therefore must multiply by 100. If you diluted your enzyme preparation, you need to multiply by the dilution factor. You will be performing this calculation repeatedly during the course; you should make certain that you understand the purpose of each term within the equation. Total Enzyme Activity: the activity per ml of enzyme solution multiplied by the total volume of that fraction. (If you have 50 ml of the original homogenate, the volume is 50 ml, even if you only saved 0.5 ml for the assay.) Total Protein: the protein concentration per ml of solution multiplied by the total volume of that fraction. Specific activity: Total Activity/Total Protein or Activity/Protein concentration Fold-purification: (Specific activity at a given step)/(Specific activity of starting sample) Yield: (Total activity at a given step)/(Total activity of starting sample)*100 (Note: this is intended to track the amount of LDH present in your sample, and not the total amount of all of the proteins in the fraction. Which purification steps do you think should be included in your table? Why do you think that each of the values listed above is important? (What are the values telling you about your purification procedure?) Your table should include, at minimum, the columns listed below.
Step Activity (mol/min /ml) Protein conc. (mg/ml) Total volume (ml) Total protein (mg) Total Specific Activity activity (mol/min) (mol/min/ mg) Fold Purification Yield (%)
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The bis-acrylamide contains two double bonds, which allow the compound to act as a cross-linker between polyacrylamide chains. The presence of the cross-linking agent results in formation of a gel matrix rather than a simple linear polymer. The polymerization reaction is a serial reaction using a free radical mechanism. The formation of the free radicals is initiated by the unstable compound ammonium persulfate. The sulfate radicals formed then react with tetramethylethylenediamine 48
(TEMED), forming TEMED radicals, which then react with acrylamide molecules to begin the actual polymerization reaction.
Varying the amount of acrylamide monomer and bis-acrylamide cross-linker present controls the formation of the matrix. The use of larger amounts of these components results in a denser matrix. Denser matrices are used for separating smaller proteins; larger proteins may find the pores in a dense matrix too small to enter, and may therefore not enter the gel at all. The table below lists approximate useful ranges for different gel densities. Percent acrylamide 7 10 12 15 Useful Molecular weight range 30,000 to 200,000 20,000 to 150,000 10,000 to 100,000 5,000 to 70,000
Real proteins have different proportions of charged side-chains. As a result, real proteins do not have constant charge-to-mass ratios. Real proteins also have varying three-dimensional shapes. In order to measure molecular weight, it is necessary to induce the formation of a similar shape and charge-to-mass ratio. Boiling the protein in the presence of the detergent sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS) and the reducing agent -mercaptoethanol (which reduces disulfide bonds) results in disruption of the three dimensional structure of the protein. In addition, large amounts of SDS bind to the protein (approximately one molecule of SDS for every two amino acid residues). Given the fact that each SDS molecule has a negative charge at the pH used for electrophoresis, the use of SDS results in a large negative charge that overwhelms any intrinsic charge present in the protein.
Note that treatment with SDS and -mercaptoethanol will result in the formation of denatured protein monomers; it is these protein monomers that are separated on the SDS PAGE. After the electrophoresis has been performed, the protein must be detected. The most commonly used method for detecting protein is Coomassie Blue R-250. Coomassie blue is a dye that binds proteins. Staining is performed by placing the gel in a solution of Coomassie blue in acetic acid and methanol. The function of the acetic acid and methanol is to cross-link the proteins into the gel so that they do not diffuse. Following staining of the proteins, the gel is placed in a solution of acetic acid and methanol, which results in removal of the excess Coomassie blue. 49
An example of an SDS gel is shown at right. Lane 1 in the example is comprised of proteins of known molecular weight called molecular weight standards. Lanes 2, 3, and 4 contain increasing concentrations of an experimental protein sample. Loading increasing amounts of protein makes it possible to see minor impurities, which are difficult to see in lane 2 and fairly obvious in lane 4. The molecular weight standards can be used to calibrate the migration of proteins of differing sizes on the gel. For any given gel, the migration will be inversely proportional to the log of the molecular weight. Thus, a plot of log molecular weight versus migration distance for proteins of known size can act as a standard curve to allow measurement of molecular weights of unknown proteins. An example of an SDS PAGE standard curve is shown at right. Note that proteins within an SDS polyacrylamide gel are denatured; the molecular weight determined will be that of the individual monomers of multimeric proteins. A commonly used set of molecular weight standards for SDS PAGE experiments is shown in the table below. Standard protein Rabbit muscle phosphorylase b Bovine serum albumin Chicken ovalbumin Bovine carbonic anhydrase Soybean trypsin inhibitor Chicken lysozyme Molecular weight (Da) 97400 66200 45000 31000 21500 14400
As mentioned above, when running an SDS PAGE, you must denature your proteins and coat them with SDS. This is usually done by boiling the protein sample in SDS PAGE sample buffer. In this experiment, you will be using a 5x Sample buffer, which contains the relevant reagents at five-times the required final concentration. The sample buffer has three roles. The sample buffer provides the SDS necessary for the uniform charge-to-mass ratio. The sample buffer also provides a tracking dye (usually bromophenol blue, a blue dye that runs at a low apparent molecular weight). The tracking dye makes it easier to see the sample during loading, and lets you know when the lowest molecular weight proteins are getting near the end of the gel. Finally, the sample buffer contains glycerol to make the protein sample denser than the
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electrophoresis tank buffer, so that the protein sample will sink to the bottom of the well when you load it. The type of SDS polyacrylamide gel you will use consists of two layers: the top layer is the stacking gel and the bottom layer is the resolving gel, based on a method invented by Laemmli in 1970.3 The purpose of the two sections differs: the stacking gel concentrates all of the protein in a narrow region, while the resolving gel performs the actual separation of the proteins by molecular weight. The stacking gel also contains the wells into which the samples are loaded. The stacking gel is prepared at a lower pH (6.8) and lower acrylamide percentage (6%). At this low pH the glycine of the electrophoresis tank buffer is in the neutral zwitterionic form and is not an effective carrier of current. The chloride ions also present are highly charged and migrate rapidly toward the anode. The SDS-coated protein molecules and the dye, which have charge-to-mass ratios greater than that of the glycine but less than that of Cl-, must migrate behind the Cl- and ahead of the glycine. This has the effect of concentrating the proteins in a thin band sandwiched between the Cl - ions and the glycine molecules. In addition, because the acrylamide concentration of the stacking gel is very low most proteins are not retarded and move freely through the gel matrix. When the sample reaches the end of the stacking gel it should appear as a thin blue band. The resolving gel is at pH 8.8 and has the desired acrylamide concentration for separation of proteins in the appropriate size range (10% for your experiment). When the stacked samples enter the resolving gel the higher pH results in negatively charged glycine molecules that then migrate with the Cl- ions. The protein samples lag behind and are separated by the sieving effect of the gel. The tracking dye will migrate faster than the proteins. When the tracking dye reaches the end of the gel, the electrophoresis should be terminated so that the proteins do not run off the gel. Why are you running more than one gel? Gels have limits in terms of the amount of protein that can be loaded. Loading too much protein results in overloading in which the sample runs unevenly. Loading too little protein makes the protein bands difficult to detect. In choosing the amount of protein to load, you need to consider the number of proteins in your sample; if your sample contains many proteins, you can load more total protein. In the gel drawn at right, the same mass of total protein was loaded in each lane. In the first lane, there were many proteins, and therefore none resulted in an intense band. You could have loaded more protein for this sample. In the second lane, there are five proteins visible; the amount loaded was appropriate for this sample. The third lane is overloaded; there is too much of the one protein present, and it did not run cleanly. In fact, the lower portion of this band probably ran at a molecular weight smaller than the
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actual molecular weight of the protein, and it may have distorted the protein migration in adjacent lanes. The gel run in this experiment will be used to estimate an appropriate amount of protein to load on subsequent gels.
Reagents Chemicals required: (Note: the resolving gel may be poured for you. If you pour the resolving or stacking gels, the acrylamide solution, buffer solutions, and APS and TEMED will also be provided. The recipes for the sections of a single gel are shown below) 10% Resolving gel 1.5 ml 1.5 M Tris-HCl, pH 8.8 2 ml 30% acrylamide 0.06 ml 10% SDS 2.44 ml water Add last to initiate reaction: 30 l 10 % ammonium persulfate and 5 l TEMED Pour gel and layer n-butanol on top of the polymerizing solution. After polymerization is complete, rinse off the top of the gel to remove the butanol. Stacking gel 0.875 ml 1.0 M Tris-HCl, pH 6.8 0.583 ml 30% acrylamide 0.035 ml 10% SDS 2.007 ml water Add last to initiate reaction: 30 l 10 % ammonium persulfate and 5 l TEMED Pour the gel and insert the comb to create the wells. 5x Sample Buffer 60 mM Tris-HCl, pH 6.8 25% glycerol 2% SDS 14.4 mM -mercaptoethanol 1% bromophenol blue
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Electrophoresis tank buffer 25 mM Tris 192 mM glycine, pH 8.8 0.1% SDS Coomassie Staining Solution (10% Acetic acid, 25% Methanol, 0.05% Coomassie R250 or Bio-Safe Coomassie staining solution) Hardware required: Electrophoresis apparatus Gel loading tips Weigh boats for gel staining 100C water bath Microcentrifuge tubes
Procedures: 1. Set up the gel apparatus. Mark location of wells before adding tank buffer Remove bubbles from bottom of gel 2. Prepare your samples. You will want to run all protein samples that contain LDH activity. This should include: Crude homogenate Ammonium Sulfate Pellet/Desalting Column Elution Peak Cibacron Blue Elution Fraction(s) The gel apparatuses you will be using have 10 wells, so you can plan on running 3 lanes for each of your samples. Each sample should contain 20 l to which you will add 5 l 5x sample buffer. Prepare 2 g, 10 g, and 50 g aliquots for the crude homogenate and desalted ammonium sulfate samples; prepare 2 g and 10 g aliquots for the peak fraction(s). (Note: do not prepare the 50 g sample for your peak fraction(s); this would result in an overloaded lane.) To calculate how much of each sample to use you must refer back to the protein concentration determined by the Bradford assay in Experiment 2D. If your protein concentration is too low to allow preparation of the more concentrated aliquots, make the most concentrated aliquots you can.
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Example: Sample preparation: Sample #1: The results of the Bradford protein determination indicate a concentration of 9.6 mg/ml. Note that this can also be stated as 9.6 g/l. For the gel, the 2 g sample should have a final volume of 25 l; however, you wish to load 20 l of the sample, and have this 20 l contain 2 g. This means that the concentration of the 2 g sample should be 2 g/20 l, or 0.1 g/l. How can you make a 0.1 g/l sample from a 9.6 g/l stock solution? A quick calculation indicates that you need to dilute your stock 96-fold. This is a large dilution, and will require pipetting less than 1 l of your stock solution. Because it is impossible to accurately pipet such small volumes, you should make up a more convenient concentration, such as 1 g/l. This is a 9.6-fold dilution of the sample. 9.6-fold dilution preparation: 5 l protein sample + 43 l water or buffer (This can be calculated readily. You want a 9.6-fold dilution. Pick a convenient starting volume, such as 5 l, and multiply by the dilution factor (5 l x 9.6 = 48 l) Thus, 48 l is the desired total final volume. The amount of buffer is then 48 l 5 l = 43 l. The new concentration is (9.6 g/l)/9.6 = 1 g/l You should understand how to do dilutions like this one and how to calculate the protein concentration in the diluted sample! You can then use the dilution of your stock to prepare the 2 g sample: 25 l of 0.1 g/l requires 2.5 g of protein, which is 2.5 l of a 1 g/l solution. To complete the sample, you need to add 17.5 l of water and 5 l of 5x sample buffer. For the 10 g sample, you could use the dilution prepared above. 25 l of 0.5 g/l requires 12.5 l protein sample; you then need to add 7.5 l water and 5 l of 5x sample buffer. For the 50 g sample, you can use your original protein stock. 25 l of 2.5 g/l requires 62.5 g of protein; 62.5 g)/(9.6 g/l) = 6.5 l of the protein sample.
3. Add 5x sample buffer to each sample. The sample buffer should be added at 1/5 the final volume. Your samples contain 20 l so you should add 5 l sample buffer (5l is 1/5 of 25 l). If your samples do not contain 20 l of diluted protein, you must determine how much sample buffer to add. Calculate how you are going to prepare all of your samples before coming to class! 4. Heat all samples at 100C for 2 minutes. Spin down the protein solution for 5 seconds, so that all of the liquid is at the bottom of the microfuge tube. 5. Apply samples to wells. Record how the samples were loaded! 6. Attach the electrodes to gel apparatus, and turn on the power supply. Run the gel at constant current (15 mA) until the tracking dye reaches 1 cm from the end of the gel. Be careful--the high current during gel electrophoresis is dangerous!
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7. Turn off the power supply and remove electrodes. Remove the gel sandwich. Remove one spacer, and insert it in one corner between the glass plates. Use the spacer to gently pry off one glass plate. Carefully remove the gel from the plate and cut one lower corner at lane #1 to distinguish the two sides. Place it in a weigh boat containing stain solution. Do not handle the gel with your bare hands: acrylamide is a cumulative neurotoxic agent and is absorbed through the skin! Residual unpolymerized acrylamide will be present in the gel. The gel will be stained overnight and transferred to the destaining solution before the next lab period. The results should be visible in the next lab period.
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Experimental Procedure: Chemicals required: Transfer Buffer 192 mM Glycine 25 mM Tris pH 8.3 1.3 mM SDS 20% methanol Blocking solution (1% gelatin or 3% BSA in TBST + 0.02% sodium azide) Tris Buffered Saline (TBS) 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 7.5 150 mM NaCl TBST: TBS with 0.1% Tween-20 10% SDS polyacrylamide gels (see Experiment 3A) Electrophoresis tank buffer 5x Sample buffer Coomassie Staining Solution Hardware required: Electrophoresis apparatus 100C Water bath Gel loading tips Weigh boats for gel staining Hoefer Semi-Dry Transfer apparatus Filter paper Transfer membrane
Procedure: 1. Set up the gel apparatus Mark the location of wells before adding tank buffer. After adding the tank buffer, remove the bubbles from the bottom of the gel. 2. Prepare the samples You will want to run all protein samples that contain LDH activity. As you will recall, these should include: Crude extract Desalted Ammonium Sulfate Pellet Cibacron Blue NADH Elution Use the SDS-PAGE gel you ran last time to determine the best amount of protein to load. You want to choose a protein concentration that yields sharp, easily detectable, individual bands. Prepare samples as you did before, adjusting the amount of protein to be added based on the results from the previous gel. You will be running two lanes of each sample so prepare twice the sample amount needed for a single lane (2 x 25 l), or two 25 l samples, for each protein sample.
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3. Load the samples The SDS-PAGE gel will be cut in half. One half will be stained with Coomassie blue and the other transferred for Western blotting. Therefore, you want to load your gel so that you have two identical halves. The following arrangement is suggested: Lane 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Protein Standards (not colored) Cibacron Blue Peak fraction Crude Extract Desalted Ammonium Sulfate Pellet Protein Standards (prestained) Cibacron Blue Peak fraction Crude Extract Desalted Ammonium Sulfate Pellet
Remember to record how you loaded the samples! 4. Run the gel Attach the electrodes to the gel apparatus, and turn on the power supply. Run the gel at constant current (15 mA per gel) until the tracking dye reaches the end of the gel. Be careful: the high current levels used during gel electrophoresis can be dangerous! 5. Disassemble the gel Turn off the power supply and remove the electrodes. Remove the gel sandwich and gently separate the glass plates. Remove the stacking gel and discard it. 6. Separate the gel Cut the gel in half. Place half of the gel (the half with the unstained protein standards) in a weigh boat with Coomassie blue stain and incubate overnight. The other half of the gel (the one with the stained protein markers) will be transferred to the membrane. 7. Transfer the protein to nitrocellulose To prepare the transphor sandwich cut 4 pieces of filter paper and 1 piece of membrane to the same size as the gel. Briefly soak the filter paper and the membrane in transfer buffer. Place 2 pieces of the soaked filter paper on the anode (positive electrode), followed by the membrane. Then place the gel on top of the membrane and put two more pieces of the soaked filter paper on top. Make sure no air bubbles are trapped underneath; you can roll a glass pipet or test tube over the transphor sandwich to remove any trapped air bubbles. Transfer will occur for 30 minutes at an appropriate amperage. In most cases, an appropriate amperage can be calculated based on the size of the gel, in order to obtain 0.8 mA/cm2 of gel. For your gels, this will be approximately 30 mA. 8. Block the non-specific protein binding sites
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When the transfer is complete, place the membrane in blocking solution in a weigh boat on the shaker platform until next laboratory period.
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Incubations Blocking. The first step (which should be complete) is to incubate the membrane in a blocking solution (a solution which contains high concentration of protein). The blocking solution is usually prepared with either bovine serum albumin or milk proteins. This step is referred to blocking because the protein in the blocking solution binds to non-specific protein binding sites on the membrane, and therefore prevents antibodies (which are proteins) from binding to these sites. Primary antibody. After blocking, the membrane is incubated in a solution containing the primary antibody. The antibody used in this experiment was raised in rabbits against LDH. The antibody should bind to any of its antigen molecules (in this case, LDH) present on the membrane. The antibody-antigen binding affinity is very high and the complex will remain intact during the wash steps. Excess antibody is removed by washing in a Tris-buffered saline solution that contains small amounts of the detergent Tween-20 (TBST buffer). Secondary antibody. To detect the antibody-antigen interaction a secondary antibody is added. An example of a secondary antibody that will be used is a goatanti-rabbit immunoglobin antibody. This is an antibody raised in goats that recognizes rabbit immunoglobin. Incubation of the membrane will create a tertiary complex that consists of (LDH):(rabbit anti-LDH):(goat anti-rabbit immunoglobin). Excess secondary antibody is removed by washing in TBST buffer as was done for the primary antibody. Color detection. One method used for color detection is to take advantage of the strong affinity between the protein avidin and the small molecule biotin. In this approach, biotin is covalently attached to the secondary antibody (so you actually have a biotin-conjugated goat anti-rabbit immunoglobin antibody). After incubation of the membrane with the biotin-conjugated antibody, the membrane is incubated with an enzyme covalently attached to avidin. The (LDH):(rabbit anti-LDH):(goat antirabbit-biotin):(avidin-enzyme) is incubated with substrates for the enzyme reaction that ultimately produces an insoluble colored precipitate. In this experiment you will use alkaline phosphatase, which catalyzes reactions that look like this: ROPO32- + H2O ROH + HPO4-. Color is produced by using the substrate 5-bromo-4-chloro-3indolyl phosphate (BCIP). The color is produced by the reaction of the dephosphorylated BCIP reacting with nitro blue tetrazolium (NBT) to form a purple/black precipitate. This reaction can detect 25-50 pg of protein on a Western blot. The sensitivity may be increased by increasing the incubation time with the substrates and allow more product to develop. Remember to wear gloves when handling the membrane to prevent your own proteins and finger oils from interfering in the experiment. Please take only the amount of reagent that you need! The membrane has been incubated in blocking solution since last period. You are now ready to begin the antibody incubations.
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Note: The successive washes are time consuming. Work efficiently and be prepared for the next step! 1. Prepare an appropriate dilution of primary antibody in antibody buffer. 2. Transfer the blocked membrane to the primary antibody solution (made up in step 1). Incubate with shaking at room temperature for approximately 30 minutes. 3. Wash the membrane three times (5 minutes each wash) with 30 ml (each wash) of TBST buffer. 4. Prepare the secondary antibody dilution. 5. Transfer the blocked membrane to the secondary antibody solution (made up in step 4). Incubate with shaking at room temperature for approximately 30 minutes. 6. Wash the membrane three times (5 minutes each wash) with 30 ml (each wash) of TBST buffer. 7. Transfer the membrane to 30 ml of Avidin-AP solution and incubate at room temperature with shaking for approximately 45 minutes. 8. Wash the membrane three times (5 minutes each wash) with 30 ml (each wash) of TBST buffer. 9. Transfer the membrane to freshly prepared Development Solution. Let color develop sufficiently (color develops best in relatively low light). When color has developed, stop the reaction by immersing and rinsing the membrane in deionized water for approximately 10 minutes. 10. Photograph the developed membrane to create a permanent record of the experiment.
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3. On the same column your sample elutes at 12 minutes. What is the molecular weight of your protein? 4. Why do you want to set the absorbance detector for 280 nm? 5. When pouring a gravity column, you notice that all of the beads have fully settled. What would probably happen if you add more beads? How would this affect any separation performed using the column?
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applied to a column varies somewhat with bead type (e.g., about 2 to 3% of the bed volume for Sephadex, and about 0.5 % of the bed volume for Superdex). The figure (below) shows a gel filtration chromatogram separating three proteins. The inset shows a standard curve (a plot of log of molecular weight versus elution volume) generated using a number of proteins (black squares); it also shows the migration positions of the three unknown proteins plotted on the standard curve line. From this graph it is possible to estimate the molecular weight of the unknown proteins. In this case, the three proteins shown were known to be the only proteins present in the solution. (Note: V0 is the measured void volume for this particular column.)
Gel filtration chromatography can be performed using gravity (especially for large columns used for protein purification), or using low pressure or high pressure pumps (especially for analytical purposes). You will use both HPLC and gravity for your gel filtration experiments. HPLC columns have high resolution, and can usually be run fairly rapidly. Certain problems are inherent in the process of gel filtration. First, even if the sample is applied as a narrow band to the column, the turbulence associated with passing the mobile phase through the column results in a broadening of the bands of the applied molecules as they travel through the column. The broadening of the bands works against the purification of the individual components of the sample, since the broad peaks can partially overlap one another. Thus, it is advisable to apply the sample as a narrow band on the top of the column. This can limit the usefulness of the method, because the sample may in some cases be difficult to concentrate sufficiently to 67
make the method optimal. Another problem with gel filtration is that proteins may interact with the column matrix. This interaction will retard the elution of the protein and the apparent molecular weight will be lower than expected. To prevent interaction of the protein with the matrix the gel filtration should be run under moderate ionic strength to prevent ionic interactions between the proteins and the column matrix. Separation on gel filtration columns increases in proportion to the square root of the column length. Longer columns therefore result in higher resolution. Unfortunately, both the cost of the column and the time the column takes to run increase in direct proportion to the length of the column. Separation is inversely proportional to flow rate; thus, improved separation typically requires longer chromatography times. The maximum flow rate for a particular separation on a particular column can be estimated from theoretical considerations, but usually has to be determined empirically (i.e. try a flow rate, and see if the results are acceptable). Materials Phosphate buffer 0.05 M sodium phosphate buffer, pH 7 Protein standards HPLC Hamilton Syringe HPLC Gel Filtration Column Gravity columns Swollen Sephadex G-100 Column tubing Column buffer (20 mM Tris-HCl, 100 mM NaCl, pH 7.4) Procedure for the HPLC gel filtration 1. HPLC column will be pre-equilibrated with phosphate buffer before class. 2. Prepare protein standards as per instructor instructions. 3. Inject 50 l of the protein standards into the injection loop with the manual injector set to Load. Start the run by turning the injector to Inject, and simultaneously start data collection by pressing Inject. (The instructor will show you how to use the HPLC). You will use an isocratic elution procedure run at 0.5 ml/min or 1 ml/min with the detector set for 280 nm. 4. After standards have eluted you will follow the same procedure for the LDH sample. The instructor will advise you on preparation of the LDH sample. 68
Make sure that the gel filtration columns do not run dry at any point . If the HPLC column runs dry, it may be irreparably damaged. If the gravity column runs dry, you will need to re-pour it.
Procedure for pouring the gravity gel filtration column HPLC columns are packed by machines, and tend to cost several hundred dollars each. Gravity columns, however, are generally prepared by the user, and are usually much less expensive. You will use both types of column during the next two class sessions. Preparing a gravity column requires preparing the beads. Gel filtration beads usually need to be swollen. The swelling of the beads is a consequence of hydration of the beads, and usually takes 24 to 72 hours, depending on the bead type. You will use beads that have been swollen prior to the class period. 1. Make sure that the beads and buffer that you will use are at the temperature you will use for pouring the column. If you are pouring the column at room temperature using cold buffer, air bubbles will form as the buffer warms. 2. Gently suspend the beads in buffer using a stir rod. You want an even suspension, but you do not want to damage or crush the beads in the process. (Do not use a magnetic stirrer!) Make sure that a reasonable amount of buffer is present (too little buffer will make the suspension too viscous to pour evenly, while too much will require a long time to pour. A volume of buffer equivalent to about half the bead volume is usually reasonable. 3. Pour the bead suspension into the column. Use a stir rod to help run the suspension down the side of the column. Alternatively, tilt the column to make pouring easier. If air bubbles form, you will need to re-pour the column. 4. Allow the buffer to begin draining from the column. As the buffer drains, the beads will become more concentrated. In addition, the beads will begin to settle toward the bottom of the column. Periodically add more bead suspension to the column. Do not allow the bead suspension to completely settle before adding more beads; this will create a discontinuity in the column that will adversely affect resolution. In addition, when pouring, try to avoid disturbing the bed of previously settled beads. You want the bed to be as even as possible. 5. After all of the beads have been added to the column, place the top on the column, and begin equilibrating the column with buffer.
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The usual method for raising the precipitant concentration slowly involves a technique called vapor diffusion. If two separate solutions are confined in a small sealed container, solvent from the more dilute solution will tend to evaporate and condense in the more concentrated solution until both solutions have the same solute concentration. This is especially true if the more concentrated solution has a much larger volume. If the protein is added to the more dilute solution, it will experience a slow increase in solute concentration during this process. If the protein is soluble in the dilute solution, and less soluble in the more concentrated solution, it will tend to leave the solution in a relative slow fashion, and therefore have the opportunity to crystallize. The method you will use is a commonly used version of the vapor diffusion technique called the hanging drop method. In this method, a small volume the protein is mixed with a known ratio of the precipitant solution (usually involving a 1:2 dilution of the precipitant). This small volume of protein/precipitant is then inverted and suspended above a larger, undiluted solution of the precipitant. Assuming that the chamber is sealed, the concentration of precipitant in the protein solution will begin to rise. The time required for equilibration varies depending on precipitant type, and chamber and solution sizes, but typically involves 24-48 hours. Finding the correct conditions for crystallization frequently involves setting up several thousand of these hanging drops using different types of precipitants, with different types of ions present, and different types of buffers present, while varying the pH and the concentration of all of these components. Precipitants commonly used for the technique include detergents, ammonium sulfate, polyethylene glycols of varying size, and small organic alcohols such as ethanol and isopropanol. Crystallography projects tend to be relatively lengthy undertakings. The first step is obtaining purified protein (either by purifying it yourself, or by talking someone into purifying it for you). Because large-scale screening of crystallization conditions is usually necessary, it is rarely worth beginning a crystallography project unless at least 100 mg of purified protein are available. The second step is obtaining crystals, the step you are undertaking today. The third step is obtaining diffraction quality crystals. The crystals obtained from screening are usually too small, and are sometimes insufficiently well ordered to allow diffraction analysis. Once crystallization conditions are found, the conditions usually need to be modified to obtain suitable crystals. In general, reasonably large crystals are most useful; for proteins large crystals are about 200 m in their smallest dimension. The first three steps of a crystallography project involve fairly standard biochemistry. The remaining steps (collecting the diffraction data, analyzing the data, and solving the structure) are more complex, and are most commonly performed by individuals with at least some specialized training in the field of X-ray diffraction analysis.
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Reagents and Supplies 24 well plates Glass cover slips 5 ml syringes Immersion oil Solutions for crystallography, and proteins to test for crystal formation. Purified LDH solution Setting up a crystal box Because crystal condition screening requires testing a variety of conditions, the screening is frequently performed in 24-well culture plates. These allow a variety of conditions to be tested simultaneously, and are well suited to the hanging drop method. The box is arranged in a six by four array. When setting up multiple conditions, this array is frequently used to allow a range of concentrations to be run in series across the box.
Procedure Use a syringe to put a narrow band of oil around each of the six wells in the first row of the plate.
Lay out six glass cover slips on a small piece of paper. Avoid touching the surface of the cover slips, and try to keep the cover slips as clean as possible. Place 2 l of protein in the center of the each of the six cover slips. Add 2 l of the corresponding well solution to the protein drop. Pick up the cover slip, and place it, inverted, on the well, making sure that the oil forms a seal around the entire perimeter of the well.
After all of the wells are set up, check the drops under a microscope for the immediate formation of precipitate, and for the presence of dirt, dust, and other objects that may appear as crystalline artifacts. After checking the drops, place the box in a cabinet where it will be protected from traffic. Periodically (once every day or so) examine the drops under a microscope for the presence of crystals.
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that this scheme is applicable to reversible enzymes; it merely assumes that the initial concentration of product is zero, and therefore the reverse reaction does not occur. This situation is somewhat unusual in a physiological system, but is readily achieved in experiments performed using purified enzymes. 5Equation 3 assumes that the reverse reaction can be ignored (a good assumption if product concentration is initially zero). Note the [E]f; this is the concentration of enzyme not bound to substrate; in most cases, [E]f will be significantly less than the total enzyme concentration (usually abbreviated [E]t). In contrast, steady state conditions assume that [S]t [S]f ( i. e. [ES] is a negligible fraction of [S]t because [S]t>>[E] t), and therefore it is not necessary to correct [S]t for the amount of S present in the ES complex.
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In order for steady state conditions to be possible, the enzyme concentration must be a very small fraction of the substrate concentration. This is necessary in order to prevent the conversion of substrate into product from resulting in significant changes in substrate concentration. If substrate concentration decreases significantly, ES complex concentration will also decrease, and Equation 3 will become a poor approximation of the true situation. Using the steady state assumption, and some simple kinetics calculations, we can derive an equation for the rate of product formation as a function of substrate concentration: k2 [E]t [S ] Equation 4 v = k1 + k2 + [S] k1 If the amount of enzyme used ([E]t) is the same in each assay, then k2[E]t will be a constant, usually termed Vmax . Combining the rate constants in the denominator into a new constant, Km , results in an equation you have seen before, the MichaelisMenten equation: V [S] Equation 5 v = max K m + [S] Contemplation of Equation 4 or Equation 5 reveals that velocity is a linear function of the amount of enzyme present (assuming that steady state conditions hold): for any substrate concentration, increasing the concentration of enzyme will increase the velocity in direct proportion. However, at any enzyme concentration, the velocity depends non-linearly on the amount of substrate present. The equation for velocity as a function of substrate concentration is that of a rectangular hyperbola. The non-linear nature of the Michaelis-Menten equation has caused some difficulty, because determining the parameters for non-linear equations from real experimental data by standard analytical methods is impossible. The most common method used for determining the Km and Vmax for an enzyme has historically been the use of one of three linear transformations of the Michaelis-Menten equation: Km 1 = 1 Equation 6 + v Vmax[S] Vmax v = Km [S] = v v [S] Km Vmax + Vmax + [S] Vmax Equation 7 Equation 8
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The linear transformations of the Michaelis-Menten equation allow the use of leastsquares linear regression to determine the Km and Vmax for an enzyme from experimental velocity versus [S] data. Linear forms of the Michaelis-Menten equation are useful, because many calculators and most graph-generating computer programs contain linear regression algorithms (such as the trend-line function in Excel). In addition, it is much easier to interpret changes for linear plots than for non-linear ones. Unfortunately, the use of these linear transformations of the Michaelis-Menten equation implies that the enzyme assay data contain no experimental errors (a clearly inaccurate assumption), because including an error term makes the mathematical transformation non-linear as well. In addition, the linear equations frequently result in inaccurate values of the parameters Km and V max , because they tend to be heavily affected by the error in some data points. This is particularly true for Equation 6 (the double-reciprocal transformation often called the LineweaverBurk equation), in which the data point that affects the parameters Km and Vmax most strongly is the one the most likely to be inaccurate (the point corresponding to the lowest substrate concentration). One partial solution to the problem of using linear transformations is to use more than one of them. If your data fit a rectangular hyperbola closely, all of the linear transformations will yield similar values for the kinetic parameters. On the other hand, if your data deviate significantly from hyperbolic behavior, linear regression fits to the different equations will result in markedly different values for Km and Vmax . A much better method for determining the Km and V max values involves the use of non-linear regression. Until the advent of computers, non-linear regression was very difficult, because it is an iterative procedure. While most fairly sophisticated plotting programs include non-linear regression routines that allow data to be directly fit to the hyperbolic Michaelis-Menten equation, most students, and many scientists, are unfamiliar with the technique. In addition, non-scientific programs, such as Excel, lack an algorithm for performing non-linear regression. Multisubstrate Enzymes The enzyme kinetics concepts briefly outlined above apply primarily to relatively simple enzymes. Enzymes with more than one substrate, or more than one active site, may not exhibit Michaelis-Menten kinetics. Lactate dehydrogenase has two substrates (the organic acid and the nicotinamide coenzyme in the appropriate redox state); in addition, the tetrameric enzyme may have a total of four active sites for each substrate. Depending on the experimental conditions used, LDH may not be a true Michaelis-Menten enzyme. Dealing with multiple substrates is relatively straightforward: if the concentration of one substrate is varied while the other one is held constant at a high value, the kinetics will exhibit pseudo-first order behavior. Thus, if NAD concentration is high, and lactate concentration is varied, the Km and Vmax values for lactate can be calculated from the observed velocity data. Note that the Vmax value obtained will be somewhat lower than the true value: the true Vmax value is an asymptote in the
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relevant equation, and its determination requires extrapolation concentrations of both substrates.
to
infinite
Enzymes with more than one active site may exhibit cooperativity, in which binding of one substrate alters either the binding affinity for other substrate molecules or the catalytic rate constant for the reaction. Experimentally, differentiating between deviations from hyperbolic behavior due to cooperativity or due to poor experimental technique is often a non-trivial task. For the purposes of this course, you can assume that LDH does not exhibit cooperativity (this turns out to be a reasonable assumption under most conditions). Catalytic Rate Constants The Michaelis-Menten equation (Equation 5) contains two parameters: Km and Vmax . While Km is a constant for each enzyme, Vmax is not really a constant, because it depends on the enzyme concentration. Enzyme concentrations can be chosen arbitrarily; different experiments may intentionally or inadvertently use different enzyme concentrations. Factoring out the enzyme concentration from the Vmax leaves a rate constant that is, like the Km , a constant physical property of the enzyme. 6 Comparing Equations 4 and 5 suggests that this rate constant is k2; this is correct only for enzymes described by the simple reaction scheme shown in Equation 1. A more general term for this is the catalytic rate constant, kcat (also known as the turnover number); kcat is the rate constant that characterizes the slowest step of the enzymatic process under investigation. The kcat is the number of substrate molecules converted to product by a single enzyme molecule per unit time. For any enzyme, kcat is a far more useful value than Vmax , because kcat is independent of enzyme concentration. Calculation of kcat is straightforward: V Equation 9 kcat = max [E] t Obviously, the use of Equation 9 means that you need to have determined the concentration of the enzyme in some way. Obviously also, the enzyme concentration in Equation 9 is the concentration in the reaction, not the concentration in your stock solution. You have measured the amount of protein present in your purified LDH fraction. If you assume that this protein concentration (in mg/ml) represents the LDH concentration (in mg/ml), you can use this protein concentration and the molecular weight of LDH to determine the concentration. Side Note: Linear Regressions
6Actually,
both Km and k cat are only constant under a given set of conditions. For MichaelisMenten enzymes, these values are independent of enzyme concentration, but are altered by changes in temperature, pH, and other factors. Small changes in these parameters probably accounts for some of the observed experimental errors.
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In dealing with experimentally obtained numerical data, it is frequently necessary to propose a mathematical model that describes the system. In order to be useful, this model should have some basis in reality: the parameters in the model should describe properties of the system being studied. The above discussion summarizes a mathematical model (the Michaelis-Menten equation) that is commonly used to describe simple enzyme-catalyzed reactions. The mathematical model that describes enzyme-catalyzed product formation is a rectangular hyperbola, which is a non-linear equation. Because linear equations are much easier to solve, and somewhat easier to understand, the hyperbolic function is usually transformed into one of several possible linear equations. A linear equation is an equation of the form: y = mx + b Equation 10
A linear equation states that, if x varies, y varies in direct proportion; m is the constant of proportionality (known as the slope of the line), and b is the value of y when x = 0 (known as the y-intercept). When working with experimental data, all of the measured data points will not fit an equation of the line exactly. It is therefore necessary to estimate the slope and yintercept that best fit the experimental data. For linear equations these parameters can be calculated analytically from the experimental data. The slope and y-intercept can be calculated using Equation 11 and Equation 12, respectively. Equation 11 and 12 are least-squares linear regression equations: the slope and y-intercept are chosen such that the values give the smallest possible average errors for each data point.7
xi yi
i =1 i= 1
m=
n
n 2
xi yi
i= 1
xi n i= 1 xi2 n i= 1
Equation 11
b = y mx
Equation 128
7Least-squares
refers to the common technique of squaring the error (i.e . the difference between the average value and the actual value) for each measurement. While the error can be positive or negative, the square of the error is always a positive number. The parameter that yields the smallest overall error (the least error) is the one chosen. The sum of the squared errors
(x
i =1
xt ) , where xi is each data point, and xt is the theoretical value for that data point based
2
on the fit to the data. 8In Equation 12, x is the mean of the x values, and
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Equation 11 is moderately complex, and therefore it is usually desirable to use a computer program (or calculator) that deals with this equation automatically. A useful measure of how well the data points fit the line is the correlation coefficient, usually abbreviated R. This is calculated by:
Equation 13
A second, related, way of assessing the fit is R2 (the square of the correlation coefficient); R 2 is the fraction of the variation in y that can be accounted for by the variation in x. If R 2 = 1, the data points all fit the line perfectly; if R2 is less than 1, some of the variation in y is due to other factors (either to errors, or to non-linear behavior of the system). The smaller the R2, the poorer the fit of the data to the line. The major advantage of linearized forms of the Michaelis-Menten equation is that the linear regression can be solved exactly (non-linear regressions cannot be solved exactly).9 The linear forms of the Michaelis-Menten equation have some disadvantages. One problem (a problem common to all linear regressions) is that the slope depends heavily on the points at the end of the lines, especially if those points are well separated from points near the center of the line, while points near the center of the line have little effect on the slope. The other major problem, mentioned above, is that the linear forms of the Michaelis-Menten equation markedly distort the errors in the data points. Procedural Notes: Temperature Enzyme-catalyzed reactions, like all chemical processes, have temperaturedependent rates. This means that, in order to obtain meaningful results, you need to perform all of the measurements at the same temperature. You will be performing your experiments at room temperature. This means that you should keep all of your reagents (except the LDH) at room temperature. If you keep the LDH assay solutions on ice, you will find it very difficult to control the temperature during the measurements. Note that the volume of LDH solution you will add to each cuvette is small enough to have a negligible effect on the temperature in the cuvette; because of this, and because, like most enzymes, LDH is more stable at low temperatures, it is a good idea to keep your LDH solution cold until you need to use it.
9Least-squares
non-linear regression algorithms do exist; all require some variant of guessing a value, calculating the sum of the squared errors, guessing a new value based on the previous value, calculating the sum of the errors, and repeating. The algorithm can only approximate the true value of the parameters by repeating the guessing procedure a number of times. This tedious procedure is best left to a computer.
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Procedural Notes: Initial Rates In designing an experiment to determine the Km and Vmax values for an enzyme, it is necessary to know something about the enzyme. Obviously, you need to know what substrate to use. In addition, you need to use substrate and enzyme concentrations that result in steady state conditions. As noted above, the rate of product formation in an enzymatic reaction is dependent on the concentration of the ES complex (see Equation 2). Under steady state conditions, the concentration of ES complex is essentially constant, and therefore velocity should also be constant. Thus, when you measure product concentration, you should observe a linear increase with time. This linear phase (the linear [P] vs. time plot) is the velocity that you need to measure. If the enzyme concentration is too high, you will not observe a linear phase in the reaction, and will not be able to measure a meaningful velocity. Alternatively, if you allow the reaction to proceed for too long a period of time, you will reach conditions in which the decrease in substrate concentration is significant, and steady state conditions will no longer exist. It is therefore critical that you examine your data to be sure that you have a linear rate during each measurement. Variation in ES complex concentration can also be a consequence of varying enzyme concentration. Most experiments assume that enzyme concentration is a constant. Protein solutions are somewhat difficult to pipet accurately, you will need to exercise care in pipetting your enzyme solutions to prevent variations in enzyme concentration that will greatly complicate your analyses. Procedural Notes: Performing Linear Regression Analyses on Real Data Using the linear forms of the Michaelis-Menten equation requires figuring out which of the terms should be plotted as x and y, and figuring out how to determine the Km and Vmax values from the regression analysis. Table 1 shows the relevant information for each of the three most common linear plots used for analyzing enzyme kinetic data. The names given reflect the authors of the early papers that used each plot. Depending on the source, you may find other names associated with some of these plots (especially the plot for Equation 6). Table 1 Plot Equation 6 (Lineweaver-Burk) Equation 7 (Eadie-Hofstee) Equation 8 (Hanes-Woolf) x 1 [S] v [S] [S] y 1 v v [S] v Slope Km Vmax Km 1 Vmax y-intercept 1 Vmax Vmax Km Vmax
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Setting up one of these plots requires obtaining a series of velocities that correspond to substrate concentrations. These data are then transformed to the value to be plotted according to the relevant equation, and plotted on a graph. The transformed data are then subjected to linear regression analysis (using a function such as the trend-line algorithm of Excel), and the slope and y-intercept values then used to determine the Km and Vmax values. The example below shows this procedure for a set of data using the Lineweaver-Burk plot.
[S] (M) 0.25 0.5 1 2 4 8 v (mol/min) 1.29 2.25 3.6 5.14 6.55 7.58 1/[S] 4 2 1 0.5 0.25 0.125 1/v 0.7752 0.4444 0.2778 0.1946 0.1527 0.1319
The equation of the line (y = 0.166x + 0.1115) includes both the slope and y-intercept information. In the case of the Lineweaver-Burk plot, Vmax = 1/(y-intercept), and Km = (slope)/(y-intercept). These relationships were derived from the information in Table 1. Note that the values for Km and Vmax shown on the graph include units. These units are critically important for comparison purposes. You should always include the units for these parameters any time that you report results from a kinetic analysis of an enzyme. The data given in the example fit a rectangular hyperbola fairly closely, and as a result can be readily analyzed using the Lineweaver-Burk plot. However, most real experiments do not yield data this well behaved. You therefore need to look at the data and at the resulting graphs, and not merely accept (and report) the values calculated by Excel. There is no substitute for having an intelligent human look at the results of a kinetic (or any other kind of) experiment. References All biochemistry textbooks have sections on enzyme kinetics. In addition, a number of books have been written on enzyme kinetics. The classic textbook is: Segel, I.H. Enzyme Kinetics John Wiley & Sons, New York, 1975. 84
Other important literature includes: Fischer, E. (1894) Berichte 27, 2985. Henri, V. (1902) Acad. Sci., Paris 135, 916. Michaelis, L. and Menten, M. (1913) Biochem. Z. 49, 333. Haldane, J.B.S. Enzymes Longmans, Green & Comp. 1930, reprinted in 1965 by MIT Press. Lineweaver, H. and Burk, D. (1934) J. Am. Chem. Soc. 157, 427. Eisenthal, R. and Cornish-Bowden, A. (1974) Biochem. J. 139 , 715.
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1b. The Lineweaver-Burk plot is often used to analyze enzyme data. Divide the last velocity value in the Table by two, while using the other values from the Table. How does this affect the apparent Km and V max values? Divide the first velocity value in the Table by two, while using the other values from the Table. How does this affect the apparent Km and Vmax values? Which experimental error (the one at high [Substrate] or low [Substrate]) results in greater changes in apparent Km and V max values? Why is this true? 1c. Perform the two other linear transformations (Equations 7 and 8 from the Introduction to Enzyme Kinetics) on the modified data generated for Question 1b. Do these experimental errors have the same effects on apparent Km and Vmax values obtained using Equations 6, 7, and 8? Why? 2. Under the assumptions for steady state conditions, is the substrate concentration allowed to change? Does this make sense for a real enzyme reaction? 3a. You set up a reaction where the concentration of substrate is equal to the Km . Can this be a steady state condition? Why? 3b. You set up a reaction where the concentration of substrate is equal to the enzyme concentration. Can this be a steady state condition? Why? 4. When running the LDH assay using the lactate stock solution, what is the lactate concentration in the cuvette? Why do you need to know this value? (Hint: this is an important question!) 5. What is a good dilution of your peak fraction to test? Why do you think so?
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Determining the correct LDH dilution: Make a series of LDH dilutions in Tris buffer. Mix 0.6 ml Lactate Stock Solution, 0.4 ml NAD Stock Solution, and 0.2 ml Bicarbonate Stock Solution in a cuvette. Add 10 l of the enzyme dilution to be tested, and collect data. Attempt to find a convenient dilution that results in a rate of about 0.5 A/min. Once you have found a satisfactory LDH dilution, you will need to make a series of lactate dilutions, and use these dilutions instead of the LDH stock in the assay. Run at least 6 different dilutions of lactate; make sure the dilutions of lactate give you a range of velocities. Make sure that you make up enough diluted LDH for all of the assays you will need to run. Making a fresh dilution of the enzyme in the middle of the assay often changes the results somewhat, and makes data analysis more difficult.
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1b. Divide the last velocity value in the Table by two, while using the other values from the Table. Analyze the resulting data using each of the three linear transformation equations. How does this affect the apparent Km and Vmax values? 1c. Divide the first velocity value in the Table by two, while using the other values from the Table. Analyze the resulting data using each of the three linear transformation equations. How does this affect the apparent Km and Vmax values? 1d. Which linear transformation is most reliable for each of the different types of experimental errors? Why? 2. Determine the Km and V max for lactate from the data you collected in the last class period. Do these values seem reasonable? 3. Based on your data, what is the kcat for the conversion of lactate to pyruvate by your LDH preparation? In order to calculate kcat, you need to know the amount of enzyme you used, and the concentration of your LDH stock solution. Calculate the concentration of LDH based on the Bradford protein assay you ran on your peak fraction, assuming that all of the protein in that sample is LDH. (Note: this is a moderately complicated calculation; doing it now will greatly help your analysis for your lab report.) 4. Does the Km value tell you anything about the Vmax value for the same enzyme?
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2. When you ran the LDH assay using lactate and NAD, what happened to the absorbance of the solution after you added the enzyme?
3. When you run the LDH assay using pyruvate and NADH, what do you expect to happen to the absorbance of the solution after you add the enzyme?
4. Do you expect pyruvate to have the same Km value as lactate? Why? (Hint: how do enzymes really work?)
5. Do you expect pyruvate to have the same Vmax value as lactate? Why? (Hint: how do enzymes really work?) 6. For most enzymes, the Km is closely related to the affinity of the enzyme for its substrate(s). Which has higher affinity, an enzyme with a low Km , or an enzyme with a high Km ? Justify your answer.
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2. Estimate the I 50 from the data below. How did you come to this conclusion? [I] (mM) 0 3.75 7.5 15 30 60 120 Activity ( A/minute) 0.53 0.38 0.29 0.19 0.11 0.05 0.02
3. Use the I50 (from question 2) to determine the Ki , assuming that the inhibitor is competitive, and that the data were collected using a substrate concentration of 15 mM and a Km of 15 mM.
4. What is the advantage of using a substrate concentration near the Km in I50 determinations?
5. Calculate the kcat for your enzyme for both pyruvate and lactate.
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kinetics experiments usually cannot tell the difference between an inhibitor that actually binds to the same site as the substrate and one which does not; if binding of substrate and inhibitor is mutually exclusive (regardless of the actual location of the inhibitor binding site), the inhibition will appear competitive. Although there are exceptions, most competitive inhibitors do bind to the same site as the substrate. 11The term mixed inhibitor also avoids the problem associated with the rather poorly chosen names uncompetitive and non-competitive inhibition; it is difficult to determine from these names what type of inhibition is being described.
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the active site, the substrate can still bind at the normal active site and be converted to product (albeit at a significantly reduced rate). This tends to complicate analyses of mixed inhibition. (Many biochemistry textbooks ignore this possible condition, but many real inhibitors do exhibit this phenomenon.) In competitive inhibition, the binding of inhibitor and substrate are mutually exclusive. This results in a lowering of the apparent affinity of the enzyme for the substrate; the presence of the inhibitor raises the substrate concentration required to yield any given ES complex concentration. Therefore, the apparent Km for the substrate increases. However, the maximal amount of ES complex is the same (the maximal amount of ES complex depends only on the amount of enzyme present, a parameter which is not changed by the presence of a competitive inhibitor), and therefore the Vmax remains constant. In mixed inhibition the binding of inhibitor and substrate are not mutually exclusive, and the effect of the inhibitor is to lower Vmax and (in most cases) to alter the apparent Km . In order to determine the type of inhibitor, the Km and Vmax must be determined in the absence of inhibitor, and in the presence of more than one concentration of inhibitor. These data can then be analyzed for changes in the apparent Km or V max ( i.e. a change in the parameters as a function of inhibitor concentration). Note that you are looking for changes in parameters that are already subject to error (multiple Km determinations rarely yield exactly the same value); you will find determination of inhibitor type and Ki to be difficult unless you obtain good data. Equation 14 is a general equation for the effect of an inhibitor: v= Vmax [S] [I] [I] Km 1+ + [S] 1 + K ia K ib Equation 14
Equation 14 has two Ki terms: K ia and K ib . K ia is the inhibitor dissociation constant for the free enzyme; K ib is the inhibitor dissociation constant for the ES complex. Equation 14 is directly applicable to mixed inhibition. Non-competitive inhibition is the special case in which K ia and K ib are equal. For competitive inhibition K ib = (i.e. the inhibitor has zero affinity for the ES complex), and therefore the equation reduces to: v= Vmax [S] [I] Km 1+ + [S] K ia Equation 15
Thus, for competitive inhibitors, the apparent Km should vary from the Km determined in the absence of inhibitor as a function of inhibitor concentration and Ki : 95
[I] K mapp = K m 1 + Ki
Equation 16
As mentioned above, mixed inhibitors do not always abolish activity. In order to examine this possibility, and in order to choose reasonable inhibitor concentrations for performing Km and Vmax determinations, experiments with varying inhibitor and constant substrate concentrations are frequently performed. These experiments are often called I50 determinations, since the I50, the concentration of inhibitor required for a 50% decrease in activity, is the major parameter. In competitive inhibition, and some types of mixed inhibition, the plot of % Inhibition12 versus Inhibitor concentration is approximately hyperbolic, with an asymptote at 100% inhibition. If the plot has an apparent asymptote at significantly less than 100% inhibition, the inhibitor is unlikely to be a competitive inhibitor. If the inhibitor type is known, the I50 can be used to calculate the Ki . For competitive inhibitors, the Ki is given by: Ki = I50 [S] +1 Km Equation 17
In the limiting case where the inhibitor binds to both the free enzyme and ES complex with the same affinity (i.e. non-competitive inhibition): Ki = I50 Equation 18
In the limiting case where the inhibitor only binds to the ES complex, and the ESI complex is completely inert (i.e. uncompetitive inhibition): I50 Km +1 [S]
Ki =
Equation 19
If your data suggest that the ESI complex does, in fact, retain some catalytic activity (for example, if you find that, as inhibitor concentration increases, you are not approaching 100% inhibition), you will probably find it somewhat difficult to determine the Ki , using any of these equations.
12Percent
inhibition =
In most cases, the type of inhibitor is determined by measuring velocity for several different substrate concentrations in the presence of several different inhibitor concentrations. These data allow the comparison of the apparent Km and V max in the absence of inhibitor to the values obtained in the presence of several inhibitor concentrations. The Table below both indicates how the apparent Km and Vmax should vary, and gives equations that can be used to calculate the Ki value based in the data obtained from these experiments. In Experiment 4E (below) you will collect such data, which should both allow you to assess the inhibitor type and allow you to calculate the Ki for the inhibitor. Type of Inhibition None Competitive (Inhibitor only binds free enzyme) K mapp Km [I] K m 1+ K i 1 + [I] K ia Km 1 + [I] K ib Km Vmaxapp Vmax Vmax V max 1 + [I] K ib
Non-competitive (Inhibitor binds free enzyme and ES complex with identical affinity)
1 + [I] K ib
Km
Note: in the Table, Km and V max are the values obtained in the absence of inhibitor, while K mapp and Vmaxapp are the apparent Km and Vmax values obtained in the presence of the inhibitor.
Experimental procedures: In the two days allotted for this part of the experiment, you will examine the inhibitor type and Ki of oxalate (a compound predicted to inhibit LDH) using both pyruvate and lactate as substrates.
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Perform an I50 determination first, using both substrates. When performing the I50 determination, it is usually best to use a substrate concentration near the Km . Use the I50 data to choose inhibitor concentrations to use in Km and Vmax determinations. In performing the enzyme assays, add an additional 10 l of either buffer or inhibitor to each cuvette (this maintains the same volume in all of the cuvettes). Today, you should run I50 determinations using lactate (and NAD) and pyruvate (and NADH) as substrates. These data will be crucial in choosing oxalate concentrations to use in Experiment 4E.
Solutions Required Lactate Stock Solution 120 mM lithium lactate 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6) NAD+ Stock Solution 12 mM NAD+ 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6) Bicarbonate Stock Solution 18 mM NaHCO 3 0.5 M NaCl Pyruvate Stock Solution 60 mM Pyruvate 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6) NADH Stock solution 0.5 mM NADH 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6)
Tris buffer for Enzyme Dilution 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6) 0.5 mM 2-Mercaptoethanol Putative Inhibitor Stock Solution 300 mM oxalate 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.6)
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Velocity (mol/min) Inhibitor 1 Inhibitor 2 (1 mM) (1 mM) 0.02 0.02 0.05 0.04 0.08 0.07 0.14 0.10 0.22 0.13 0.31 0.16
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Time (min) 0 4 8 12 16 20
7. Most chemical modification reactions follow pseudo-first-order kinetics, in which the substrate concentration remaining at any given time is given by the equation: [ S] = [ S ]0 e kt where [S]0 is the initial substrate concentration, k is the rate constant, and t is the elapsed time. If, in a chemical modification experiment, you assume that the change in activity is due to a single modification that inactivates the enzyme, the enzyme activity measured corresponds to the amount of unmodified enzyme remaining. The equation above then allows calculation of the rate constant for the reaction. Calculate the rate constants for the data from question 6. Which gives a higher rate constant for the inactivation reaction (the enzyme alone, or the enzyme + lactate)?
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Experimental procedure: Running a chemical modification time-course: This is a kinetics experiment. This means that you need to perform the steps with attention to the clock. You will find it much easier if you have all of the reagents and tubes prepared before starting the reaction. 1. You will need to make a dilution of your LDH preparation. You want the LDH concentration to be 10-fold higher than the dilution you normally use for enzyme assays. 2. Make up 200 l of the reaction mixture containing: 5 mM butanedione 25 mM HEPES buffer 25 mM Potassium Borate (Use Tris buffer as necessary to obtain the correct concentrations). 3. Set up 7 microfuge tubes containing 30 l of Stop solution. You will use these tubes for each of the time points you will be obtaining.
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4. Initiate the reaction by adding 50 l of LDH dilution, and incubate the reaction mixture at room temperature. 5. Take carefully timed aliquots at 0.25, 4, 8, 12, 16, 20, and 24 minutes. For each time point, remove a 30 l aliquot of the reaction mixture and add it to a microfuge tube containing 30 l of Stop solution. Mix the aliquot with the Stop solution by gently pipeting the sample up and down 3 or 4 times. 6. Check each of your time point samples for LDH activity using the standard LDH assay with lactate as the substrate. Repeat the above experiment using the same volumes of reagents, except for the inclusion of a final concentration of 60 mM lactate in the reaction mixture. Does butanedione inactivate LDH in a time-dependent manner? Does lactate alter the inactivation kinetics? Reagents: 50 mM butanedione in ethanol 200 mM HEPES buffer, pH 7.5 200 mM potassium borate Ethanol Stop solution 20 mM HEPES, pH 7.5 20 mM potassium borate 20 mM arginine Lactate Stock Solution 120 mM lithium lactate 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8) NAD+ Stock Solution 12 mM NAD+ 10 mM Tris-HCl (pH 8.8) Bicarbonate Stock Solution 18 mM NaHCO 3 0.5 M NaCl
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important; in others, such as ligation reactions (see below), the DNA concentration can vary within a factor of ten (or more) and still allow the procedure to be successful. On the other hand, some aspects of molecular biology require considerable care. Humans (and many other organisms) secrete enzymes that degrade DNA and RNA; it is therefore necessary to be completely aware of what you are doing. Allowing the reagents to contact your skin will cause problems not necessarily to you, but definitely to your samples. DNase (the non-specific enzyme that degrades DNA) is rapidly denatured by heating at 68C; for this reason, it is a good idea to heat treat your DNA samples if there is any chance of DNase contamination. Your plasticware (the pipet tips and microfuge tubes) has been autoclaved (heated to 121C at elevated pressure) to denature any DNase associated with them; this means that you should not handle the plastic ware unnecessarily (e.g., pour out a few microfuge tubes; do not reach into the container with your fingers). Molecular biological procedures are very commonly used. Some techniques are so commonly used that all of the required reagents are available in kit form. These kits have made many aspects of molecular biology much easier. The general outline of the procedure you will use is shown below. The procedure is designed to require seven laboratory periods; however, depending on events, the portions of the procedure may be condensed or expanded. Outline of procedure to be used: Day Probable experiments 1 Use PCR to amplify LDH coding sequence. Purify plasmid to be used to express the LDH. 2 Run agarose gel on PCR reaction and plasmid. Purify DNA from PCR reaction. Perform restriction digests on plasmid and PCR DNA. 3 Ligate the plasmid and PCR product together. Prepare competent cells. Transform cells with ligation mixture. 4 Screen colonies for positive clones by PCR. 5 Screen colonies for protein expression. 6 Quantitate expression of LDH.
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2. Why is PCR amplification of the coding sequence necessary for cloning of LDH from the cDNA library?
4. During the plasmid preparation procedure, why is it necessary to be gentle with the sample after lysing the cells?
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The two strands of the DNA template are separated by heating (usually to 94C). The temperature is then decreased to allow the primers to bind to the template DNA. Once the primers have bound, the polymerase is allowed to synthesize new DNA strands (the polymerase most commonly used has a temperature optimum of 72C.)
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Good primers contain approximately 50% G+C and 50% A+T. This reduces problems in inducing template strand separation caused by the high affinity of G for C, and reduces non-specific priming common with high AT content. In addition, good primers have few regions of complementarity either internal to primer (i.e. secondary structure) or between two primers, especially at 3 end of primer, and avoid repeated sequences (e.g., AAAA or GTGTGT). Primers that are poor by these criteria can cause artifacts that prevent amplification of the desired sequence. In some cases, these potential problems are difficult to avoid due to constraints imposed by the sequence of interest; in these cases, the use of longer primers (i.e. 24 bases) may solve specificity problems. The primer should be long enough to have a reasonable melting temperature (i.e. a melting temperature of 55-70C). Melting temperature depends on a number of variables. In most cases, an approximation [ (4C for each G or C) + (2C for each A or T)] will yield a value close enough to design the PCR experiment. PCR also allows the generation of mutations at the ends of the fragment, because the primer does not need to be an exact match to the template DNA (it needs to be a sufficiently good match to allow primer binding, but it does not need to be a perfect match). In most cases, the introduction of mismatches at the 5 end of the primer has little effect. However, mismatches at the 3 end of the primer may prevent synthesis of the new strand. The primers you will use for cloning LDH were designed based on the human LDH A sequence downloaded from Genbank, and are: 5 primer: TCCAcc ATGGCAACTCTAAAGGATCAG 3 primer: CAGAAagCTTTA AAATTGCAGCTCC The lowercase bases in the primers are mismatches (i.e. bases that are not present in the actual LDH A sequence). The purpose of the mismatches is to generate specific restriction sites (the underlined sequences) to simplify some of the later steps in the cloning procedure. To avoid the possibility that mutations would destabilize the expressed protein, the mutations were designed in non-coding portions of the sequence. (The ATG in bold in the 5 primer is the LDH A start codon, and the TTA in the 3 primer is complementary to the stop codon.) The 5 primer is identical (except for the noted mismatches) to the DNA coding strand; the 3 primer is complementary to the coding strand (i.e. is identical to the non-coding strand). The primers were chosen such that the DNA fragment amplified by PCR will contain the entire coding region, with specific restriction sites at each end. The 5 primer contains an Nco I site and the 3 primer contains a HindIII site. In order to amplify the LDH coding sequence, you need a source of the actual coding sequence. Because humans, like most multicellular organisms, have genes with introns, it is rarely possible to use genomic DNA as a starting material for generating the full-length LDH gene. Instead, you will use a human cDNA library, which contains copies of most of the messenger RNAs found in one human tissue.
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PCR requires the use of a DNA polymerase to make the copies of the cDNA sequence used as a template. As noted in the figure above, the PCR method involves heating the sample to ~94C to separate the chains of the double-stranded DNA. In addition, while the oligonucleotide binding and polymerization reactions can occur at a range of temperatures, oligonucleotide binding is much more specific (i.e. it is more likely that the oligonucleotide will bind the correct sequence) at higher temperatures. You will use the DNA polymerase derived from the bacterium Thermus aquaticus. T. aquaticus prefers to live at temperature of about 70C, and therefore its proteins (including its DNA polymerases) are stable at elevated temperatures. Although the Taq polymerase is highly thermostable, it does begin to denature at temperatures above 90C. Its half-life decreases rapidly with increasing temperature. For this reason, melting times of greater than 1 minute for the chain reaction cycles should be avoided. If the thermal cycler melting temperature drifts above 95C, the enzyme may be inactivated prior to completion of the program. The Taq polymerase has a primer extension rate of 60-100 bases/second under optimum conditions; thus it may be advantageous to use short (1-10 second) extension times, particularly for short products (i.e. below 500 bp) to decrease formation of non-specific products. However, for longer fragments (greater than 1000 bases), optimum primer extension rates are rarely achieved, and longer extension times should be used. Although the Taq polymerase is a popular enzyme due to its ability to catalyze primer extension under a wide variety of conditions, it has some drawbacks. Its worst drawback is its relative lack of fidelity; it has a significant error rate, and lacks proofreading functions. As a result, many experiments employ thermostable DNA polymerases that have lower probabilities of misincorporation. PCR conditions, and especially annealing temperature, must be chosen empirically to optimize PCR product formation. Some primer-template combinations work under a wide variety of conditions; others result in product only in a narrow range of conditions. For some reactions the annealing temperature is a critical parameter, with no specific product formed except in a narrow optimum range. It is usually best to begin testing conditions with an annealing temperature of about 55C, because the use of annealing temperatures above 50C often prevents certain types of mismatch artifacts. The temperature profile shown below is a typical one that works for many different primers and templates: PCR procedure: PCR Temperature Profile Mix reagents in a PCR tube: Temp. Time Function 16 l of mixture of 1.25 mM dNTP 94C 0.5 minutes Denature DNA 10 l 10x PCR buffer 55C 0.5 minutes Primer 5 l 20 M 5 LDH primer Annealing 5 l 20 M 3 LDH primer 72C 0.75 minutes Primer 1 l of DNA template mixture Extension 62.5 l deionized water 0.5 l Taq polymerase Place the PCR tube in the PCR machine and run the PCR program as shown. 109
II. Plasmid preparation PCR is one method for generating large amounts of DNA. A second method is to allow bacteria to replicate the DNA and then purify the replicated DNA from the bacteria. In most cases the DNA of interest for this method is plasmid DNA. A plasmid is a double stranded DNA molecule that will replicate in an organism. A typical plasmid used for molecular biology contains at least four features. 1) The plasmid must be circular, because bacteria generally will not replicate linear DNA. 2) The plasmid must contain a sequence that functions as an origin of replication (ori). 3) The plasmid must contain a selection mechanism that will force the bacteria to retain the DNA; the most common type of selection mechanism used in bacteria is a gene for resistance to an antibiotic such as ampicillin. 4) The plasmid must contain a region for the insertion of the experimental DNA. A generic plasmid exhibiting these features is shown at right. An expression plasmid is a specific type of plasmid used to allow expression of heterologous DNA. An expression plasmid must therefore have, in addition to the features listed above, a strong promoter element that will drive transcription of the foreign DNA13 in the host organism, and an effective ribosome binding site that will allow efficient translation of the transcribed RNA. Because plasmids are much smaller than chromosomal DNA (for E. coli, a typical plasmid contains 5 to 10 kilobase pairs (kb), while E. coli chromosomal DNA contains about 4,800 kb), separating the two types of DNA molecule is relatively straightforward. In addition, most plasmids used in molecular biology are high copy number plasmids; in other words, each bacterium contains many copies (usually >100) of the plasmid. Therefore, although each plasmid molecule is much smaller than the chromosome, plasmid DNA often comprises ~10% or more of the total DNA in the bacterium. Plasmid preparation requires several steps: 1) Growth of bacteria containing the plasmid of interest. This involves starting a liquid culture using a single clone (each colony on a plate represents a single clone, so cultures are started by picking one colony and adding it to the culture medium). The bacteria are then grown until they reach stationary phase; stationary phase occurs when the bacteria have either used up all of the available nutrients, or when the bacterial waste products have reached levels that preclude further growth. The commonly used laboratory bacterium E. coli, reaches stationary phase after 12-18 hours of growth (typically overnight growth is assumed to result in stationary phase).
13Note
that foreign DNA can be from any organism, including the organism used as a host. Thus, E. coli can be used to express E. coli proteins from expression plasmids. In most cases, however, the DNA being expressed is from a different organism, and is being expressed in E. coli for convenience.
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(Note that some other bacterial types, and all yeast and mammalian cells in culture grow more slowly than does E. coli.) 2) Separation of the bacteria from the culture medium. The next step has two purposes, concentrating the cells, and transferring them into a buffer that will facilitate plasmid purification. The usual method is to centrifuge the culture and to discard the spent culture medium. The cells can then be frozen for storage (freezing the cells also increases the vulnerability of the cells to the lysis conditions), or resuspended immediately in a buffer for plasmid preparation. 3) Lysis of the bacteria ( i.e. disruption of the bacteria to release plasmid DNA). Bacterial cells are much tougher than human cells, and lysing bacteria requires some effort. The technique usually used to extract plasmid DNA from bacteria involves lysing the cells with a mixture of SDS and NaOH, which disrupts the cell membranes and cell wall. Once the SDS/NaOH mixture has been added to the cells, it is imperative that the cells be treated gently; DNA molecules are long and fragile, and vigorous treatment will readily damage the DNA molecules released from the cells. In addition, when performed properly, the alkaline lysis technique does not extract the chromosomal DNA (unless the chromosomal DNA is fragmented by violent shearing forces). The intention in a plasmid prep is to purify the plasmid DNA while obtaining as little chromosomal DNA as possible. 4) Neutralization of the NaOH. Once the cells have been lysed, it is a good idea to lower the pH to near neutral. Neutralization is typically performed by adding an acetate buffer. This has two effects: it prevents degradation of the DNA, and it precipitates some proteins and most of the lipids. 5) Purification of the plasmid DNA. A variety of different techniques are used for separating plasmid DNA from the other molecules present in the cell. Most of the commonly used techniques involve binding the plasmid DNA to an insoluble material, washing off unbound material (protein, lipids, and small molecules), and then eluting the DNA. Procedure for Plasmid Miniprep: The procedure given below should be used as a general guide for the alkaline lysis technique; use the manufacturers instructions for the exact procedure. Grow a 3 ml overnight culture of the cells containing the plasmid. Centrifuge 1.5 ml of the culture in a microfuge tube to pellet the cells; discard the supernatant. Depending on the size of the cell pellet, you may wish to repeat the procedure by adding an additional 1.5 ml from the same culture to the pelleted cells, and recentrifuging. Resuspend the cells in the Resuspension Buffer solution (the amount to be used varies from 200 to 350 l depending on the kit). Make sure that the cells are evenly suspended. (The solution should be cloudy with no obvious clumps). Lyse the cells using a mixture of SDS and NaOH (solution 2). After adding the SDS and NaOH, be gentle with the solution to avoid disrupting the chromosomal DNA. The solution should become fairly clear.
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Neutralize the pH using the acetate solution. You should observe the formation of a precipitate. Centrifuge the sample to pellet the precipitate. The remainder of the technique depends on the exact plasmid prep kit being used; consult the manufacturers instructions for the recommended procedure. When the procedure is complete, it is usually a good idea to heat the DNA sample to 68C for 10 minutes to inactivate any contaminating DNase. After this step, store the plasmid DNA at 20C.
Required materials: Human placental cDNA library LDH 5 and 3 primers PCR thermal cycler PCR reagents Autoclaved water E. coli overnight culture containing pTrc99A plasmid Plasmid miniprep kit Autoclaved pipet tips and autoclaved microfuge tubes Autoclaved PCR tubes Water bath set for 68C Microfuge
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In the presence of DNA, when excited by ultraviolet light, ethidium bromide fluoresces bright orange. You can therefore place the gel on a UV transilluminator to see the DNA. If you wish to make a permanent record of the gel, take a photograph through a Wratten 22A orange filter that filters out the other wavelengths emitted by the transilluminator. In order to actually use the DNA generated from the PCR reaction, the DNA fragment needs to be separated from various contaminants. The method you will use involves a modified form of the plasmid preparation procedure. DNA Clean-up Perform the procedure according to the manufacturers instructions. The approximate method is: Add the PCR reaction mixture to 1 ml DNA clean-up resin and mix. Pipet the mixture into a syringe column, and apply a vacuum to remove the liquid. Add 2 ml of 80% isopropanol, and apply the vacuum again. Centrifuge the column to remove any residual liquid. Place the column in a new microfuge tube, add 50 l of water at 68C, and centrifuge again. The microfuge tube will contain the DNA dissolved in the water you added to elute the column. Restriction Enzyme Cleavage Reactions Next, both the plasmid and the purified PCR product need to be digested with Nco I and HindIII. Restriction enzymes are crucial reagents in molecular biology. Restriction enzymes cleave DNA only at specific sequences. If you can control the sequence of the DNA (as you did with the oligonucleotides used for the LDH PCR reaction), you can control the digestion of your DNA. Molecular biology would be extremely difficult without restriction enzymes. Fortunately, different bacteria have evolved a large variety of restriction enzymes, and enzymes with specificity for large numbers of sequences are now commercially available. You will use two restriction enzymes for the cloning process. One of these, HindIII, is one of the first restriction enzymes to be discovered; it is widely used because of its reliability. The other, Nco I, is also a reliable enzyme; it is most useful, however, because of its sequence specificity. It cleaves the sequence CCATGG. A number of expression plasmids are engineered so that the ATG within the Nco I site acts as the start codon for protein synthesis. Restriction enzymes must cleave both strands of the double stranded DNA. They can do this in a number of ways. Some restriction enzymes cleave both strands at the same location, resulting in a blunt end. Other restriction enzymes cleave at different locations on the different strands, leaving short stretches of single stranded DNA. Both Nco I and HindIII leave four bases of single stranded DNA at the 5-end of their cleaved products. Restriction enzyme products will be discussed in more detail in the next section. One potential problem with restriction enzymes is that they are most active in specific buffers; the best buffer for one enzyme may not be the best one for another 115
enzyme. In some cases, it is necessary to run one reaction, perform DNA clean-up procedure, and then run the other reaction. Although Nco I and HindIII do prefer different buffers, you can use a compromise buffer to allow both enzymes to cleave the DNA in a single reaction. Required materials: Plasmid DNA purified in the previous laboratory session. PCR product from the previous laboratory session. Water bath set for 68C Water bath set for 37C DNA-clean up kit Microfuge Autoclaved pipet tips and autoclaved microfuge tubes HindIII Nco I Restriction enzyme buffer (NEB#2 or equivalent) Power supply Agarose gel apparatus Agarose DNA molecular weight marker Agarose gel Loading Buffer: 42 mg Bromophenol Blue 6.7 g sucrose to 10 ml in H2O 1x TBE: 0.09 M Tris-HCl, pH 8.0 0.09 M boric acid 2 mM EDTA
4x TBE: (4 L) 64 ml 0.5 M EDTA 174.4 g Tris base 89.0 g Boric acid QS to 4 L with ddH2O
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When you performed the restriction digests, you used Nco I and HindIII; these enzymes both leave 4-base 5-overhangs. The end generated by digestion with one of these enzymes is compatible with other ends generated by the same enzyme, but not by the ends generated by the other enzyme. You are thus taking advantage of the specificity of the restriction enzymes and of DNA ligase to create a plasmid with the LDH PCR product inserted in the correct orientation.
In setting up a ligation reaction, it is usually desirable to use a molar excess of insert DNA relative to plasmid DNA. The insert DNA will have no effect on the cells; having a molar excess of insert DNA makes it more likely that the ligase will find both plasmid DNA and insert DNA molecule to connect together, and reduces the chance that the incompatible ends of the plasmid DNA will ligate to form circular plasmid DNA. (Ligation of incompatible ends, although very rare, does occur; circularized plasmid DNA will transform cells, and in this experiment, would result in colonies that lack insert.) Replication of a plasmid requires the insertion of the plasmid DNA into the bacteria used for the replication process. In general, bacteria are reluctant to take up DNA from their environment (at least, they typically will not do so without degrading it first). In order to improve the probability that the cells you will use will actually internalize the plasmid DNA, you must first make the cells competent to absorb the plasmid DNA. One procedure that results in efficient competent cells is given below. Competent cells are significantly more fragile than normal bacteria. Vortexing the cells, heating the cells above 42C or to 42C for prolonged periods, or exposure of the cells to any of a number of other even mildly abusive treatments may kill them. Required Materials: Ligation buffer T4 DNA Ligase Water bath set for 68C Water bath set for 42C Incubator set for 37C LB media (10 to 20 ml) E. coli competent cells LB-Ampicillin plates Sterile microfuge tubes Cell spreaders Agarose gel apparatus and solutions Microfuge Autoclaved pipet tips and autoclaved microfuge tubes
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Procedures: Ligation procedure: Mix cleaved plasmid DNA with a ~3- to 10-fold molar excess of cleaved insert DNA. Add ligase buffer (which includes a buffer and the ATP required to support the reaction) and ligase. Incubate at room temperature (actually, T4 ligase prefers 15C, but for most reactions 20-25C also allows efficient ligation). After 2 to 24 hours, inactivate the ligase by heating at 68C for 10 minutes. Competent Cell Preparation: TSS: 85% LB medium 10% PEG 8000 5% DMSO 50 mM MgCl2 pH 6.5 Sterile filter DMSO may degrade into transformation inhibitors; for best results, fresh DMSO should be stored in frozen aliquots. Grow an overnight culture of the desired E. coli strain under the appropriate conditions (LB + antibiotic, if used). Add 1 ml aliquot of cells to 50 ml LB + 20 mM MgSO4; grow at ~18-20C (note: growth at higher temperatures results in somewhat lower efficiencies) to OD600 0.9 (i.e. mid-log phase). Cool the cells on ice for 20 minutes. Spin down the cells (4000 rpm for 5 minutes) in sterile tubes. Resuspend the cells in 1/10 volume TSS (5 ml for 50 ml culture). Cells may be used immediately or frozen for storage. Quick freeze the cells in 310 l aliquots in a dry ice:ethanol bath and store at -70C.
Transformation: The procedure for allowing competent cells to take up DNA is called transformation. Transformation requires mixing a small volume of DNA (usually 1-3 l) with 100 l of competent cells. The mixture is incubated on ice for 30 minutes to allow the cells to take up the DNA. The cells are then heat-shocked at 37-42C for 1 minute, and coldshocked on ice for 2 minutes. The heat shock/cold shock reverses the effect of the competent cell process, by, in effect, healing the damage inflicted by the competent cell solution. Adding 0.5 ml of culture medium (usually LB) and incubating the cells for 10 - 30 minutes at 37C assists in this healing process. This cell/medium mixture is then spread onto bacterial culture plates containing agar, LB, and a selection mechanism.
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Screening is more labor intensive than selection; selection techniques only allow cells that might be of interest to grow, while screening requires you to actually do something to find the correct plasmid. A large number of screening techniques have been developed; this brief manual cannot cover all of them. All screening techniques depend on finding a difference between plasmids of interest and other likely plasmids that might be found in cells on the same culture plate. The one you will use takes advantage of the specificity of the PCR technique; in order for 122
any plasmid to be of possible interest to you in this experiment, it must contain the LDH cDNA, and you can therefore use PCR to find E. coli colonies that contain human LDH cDNA. The procedure is to pick the colony with a sterile pipet tip, streak the cells on a new plate (so that, if the colony turns out to be correct, you will still have viable cells to replicate), and then soak the pipet tip in 10 l of water. This water (actually the few cells that drop off into the water) can then act as a template for a PCR reaction similar to the one you ran to amplify the LDH cDNA initially. Colonies that result in PCR products of the correct size (based on running the samples on an agarose gel) can tentatively be assumed to contain the correct plasmid. In running the PCR reaction this time, you do not need a 100 l reaction volume for each sample. A volume this large would waste reagents. Instead, a common method is to prepare a master solution of all of the required reagents except template, followed by adding the same volume of master mix to each PCR tube. The last step should be the addition of the template to the PCR tube (adding the template last reduces the chance of cross-contamination of the PCR samples). A master mix that allows a final reaction volume of 25 l and a template volume of 5 l should be prepared as follows: Per sample to be run: 4 l 1.25 mM dNTP mixture 2.5 l 10x PCR buffer 1.25 l 20 M 5 primer 1.25 l 20 M 3 primer 0.125 l Thermostable DNA polymerase 11 l autoclaved water In addition to the colonies you intend to screen, you should set up a positive control a reaction that you know should work. In this case, the positive control is intended to verify that the reaction mixture was prepared properly. What template do you have that you know should work in the PCR reaction? Required Materials: PCR Thermal cycler PCR reagents Water bath set for 68C Agarose gel apparatus and solutions LB-Ampicillin plates Sterile toothpicks Microfuge Autoclaved pipet tips and autoclaved microfuge tubes
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automated system. Variations on this method are being used in the genome sequencing projects currently in progress. This method is also used by sequencing services (you send your DNA sample to a lab, and they tell you what the sequence is without you having to actually do the work). The fluorescent-tag system, however, requires expensive equipment.
Laboratories that perform small scale sequencing usually use a somewhat older method in which four separate reactions are run, one for each of the possible chain terminator nucleotides; in each case, the newly synthesized DNA is radioactively labeled so that it can be detected (usually by exposing the gel to film). After the reaction is complete, the DNA is run on a polyacrylamide gel; sequencing gels can separate DNA fragments that differ in size by a single nucleotide. A representation of a sequencing gel autoradiograph (i.e. the developed film after incubation of the gel with the film) is shown below. Four reactions were run using the same template DNA and all four dNTPs, but with each reaction containing only one dideoxyNTP. The gel separated the DNA fragments based on their size; as usual, the smallest bands are at the bottom. The sequence can be read directly from the gel; simply start at the bottom, and for each band, note the lane in which the band occurred (the sequence derived from this experiment is shown on the left side of the figure). 126
The semi-automated sequencing machines use a generally similar method; the difference is that, instead of stopping the gel part-way through the separation (as is shown here), the bands are detected (based on the fluorescent tags on the ddNTPs) as each one runs off the end of the gel.
Depending on how well the reaction runs, on the homogeneity of the gel, on the quality of the template DNA, and on the exact method used, a single sequencing reaction can yield anywhere from 100 to 1000 bases of information. A cDNA of 1000 bp (such as the LDH cDNA you used) would usually require 2 to 4 reactions (using different primer positions) to read the entire sequence. The human genome (3 x 10 9 bp of unique sequence) would require at least 3 x 106 sequencing reactions; in practice, it is going to require many more sequencing reactions than that, in order to sequence each part of the genome more than once. The gel shown above is an idealized example. Some sequencing gels actually look similar to this; most, however, have artifacts of various types, which make reading the sequence somewhat more challenging. Artifacts can be due to inhomogeneities in the gel (if some lanes run faster than others, it can be difficult to read the sequence). If some copies of the DNA template have holes (or other problems that force the polymerase to stop synthesis), the gel may show bands in all of the lanes (making it difficult to decide which is the correct base). In addition, the sequence itself may cause problems: the GC base-pair binds more tightly than the AT base-pair; sequences with high GC content are especially subject to artifacts where the polymerase has trouble synthesizing the new strand, or where the DNA forms secondary structure while running on the gel which tends to alter its speed of migration through the gel. While experienced researchers can usually compensate for these problems, determining the sequence of unknown DNA samples can be quite difficult. Verifying a known sequence
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(as you would be doing for the LDH) is usually much less difficult, but can still be subject to errors. There is a chance that you may run a sequencing gel in the laboratory. However, due to the cost of the sequencing reagents, it is more likely that the general procedure will be discussed and demonstrated, but that you will not actually run a gel Required Materials: IPTG-treated overnight culture of E. coli containing apparent positive colonies. SDS PAGE apparatus Microfuge 1.5 ml microfuge tubes
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Definitions
3 (three prime): the 3-carbon of the second ring in a structure. In molecular biology, the ribose ring of the nucleotide is considered to be the second ring. The 3-end of a DNA strand is the site of new synthesis by DNA polymerases. 5 (five prime): the 5-carbon of the second ring in a structure. In molecular biology, the ribose ring of the nucleotide is considered to be the second ring. Because DNA synthesis and protein translation occur 5 to 3, the 5 end is usually considered to be the starting position; a feature that is 5 relative to a particular site is considered to be upstream, while a feature that is 3 is considered to be downstream.
Affinity chromatography: a technique for separating a protein from a mixture on the basis of a property specific to that particular protein. For example, one substrate for lactate dehydrogenase is NADH; a column with NADH or a structurally related molecule may bind lactate dehydrogenase (and probably other dehydrogenases) with high affinity, while not binding the vast majority of other proteins. Amino acid: strictly, any organic compound containing an acidic function and an amino group; in biochemistry, this term is often used to refer to any of the nineteen amino acid and one imino acid compounds typically used in biological protein synthesis. Ammonium sulfate: a salt, (NH4)2SO4, which has the property of reducing the solubility of proteins in the same solution, usually without causing structural alterations in the protein. Because different proteins exhibit differential solubility in ammonium sulfate, this salt can be used to separate proteins based on gross physical differences. Ammonium sulfate concentration is often given in percent. This percent is slightly unusual, in that it refers to percent of saturation, rather than grams of solid per 100 ml of solution. The percent ammonium sulfate varies somewhat with temperature. Anion exchange chromatography: a type of ion exchange chromatography in which the resin is derivatized using positively charged compounds such as DEAE or quaternary ethyl amino groups. The positively charged resin then allows the exchange of anions: it exchanges negatively charged proteins with counterions from the buffer. Antibiotic: a compound that either inhibits growth of, or is toxic to, bacteria, even when used systemically. Thus, compounds such as penicillin, which can be used to treat bacterial infections, are considered to be antibiotics, while compounds such 131
as ethanol (which kills bacteria when in direct contact but not if taken systemically) are not considered to be antibiotics. Antibiotic resistance: the ability to grow in the presence of an antibiotic. In most cases this trait is the result of a gene coding for an enzyme that degrades the antibiotic (for example, the gene for -lactamase confers resistance to -lactam antibiotics such as penicillin and ampicillin, because the enzyme inactivates the antibiotic by cleaving part of its structure). Bacteriophage: a virus that infects bacteria (also called simply phage). Bacteriophages, like all viruses, take over cellular machinery as part of their replication process. Engineered bacteriophages are useful for propagating DNA for a number of molecular biological processes. Base-pair: n. a set of nucleotides, one from each strand of a double-stranded nucleic acid, that form a hydrogen-bonded complex with one another. v. to form a series of such sets of nucleotides. The average molecular weight of a base pair is about 650 Da (assuming sodium as the counter ion). -ME ( -mercaptoethanol): a commonly used reducing agent. Mercaptoethanol and DTT are used to maintain the cysteine residues in the free sulfhydryl form. Cation exchange chromatography: a type of ion exchange chromatography in which the resin is derivatized using negatively charged compounds such as carboxymethyl groups. The negatively charged resin then allows the exchange of anions: it exchanges positively charged proteins with counterions from the buffer. cDNA: a DNA sequence complementary to another nucleic acid sequence. The term cDNA is usually used to refer to DNA generated by reverse transcribing an mRNA. As such, cDNAs represent actively transcribed genomic DNA but do not contain introns. cDNA library: a mixture of cDNA fragments comprised of copies of most of the mRNAs expressed within the source tissue. In most cases, the cDNAs that comprise the library are inserted into a modified form of the E. coli bacteriophage , which allows both the propagation of the DNA and, for some cloning techniques, the isolation of individual cDNAs. Chromophore: a chemical functional group within a molecule that absorbs electromagnetic radiation. While the term chromophore applies to groups that aborb radiation of any wavelength, it applies especially to groups that absorb within the visible portion of the spectrum, because these groups add color (chromo is derived from the Greek word for color) to a molecule. Codon: a sequence of three bases that can be translated into an amino acid. In order to be considered a codon, the DNA (or RNA) sequence must be part of a coding sequence, and must be in the correct reading frame. Cohesive end: the segment of single-stranded DNA extending 5 or 3 from a double stranded DNA fragment resulting from digestion by a restriction enzyme, which is 132
capable of base-pairing to a compatible end of another DNA fragment (or the opposite end of the same fragment). Cohesive ends are typically referred to as sticky ends except in formal writing. Column: a cylindrical apparatus containing chromatography resins used for chromatographic processes. Columns typically have an inlet, which allows loading of samples and addition of running buffer, and an outlet, which allows collection of the material that is not bound to the column. Compatible ends: termini of linear DNA fragments that are capable of being ligated. Compatible ends can be blunt, or can be comprised of sticky ends, where the protruding single stranded DNA sequence of one end can base-pair to the other. (Note: it is possible for the ends of a single DNA fragment to be compatible, in which case, the fragment will tend to circularize if ligated.) Competent cells: bacteria treated with a solution that greatly increases their likelihood of taking up DNA from their surroundings. Competent cells are significantly more fragile than normal bacteria, and are easily killed by violent treatment. Complementary: in molecular biology, having a sequence that will base-pair to a sequence of interest. The sequence 5-GGACTG is complementary to the sequence 5-CAGTCC. DEAE: diethyl-aminoethyl, a positively charged functional group frequently attached to resins used for anion exchange chromatography. Deoxynucleotide: a compound containing a purine or pyrimidine base attached to ribose phosphate, in which the ribose is missing one of the hydroxyl groups normally present. Unless specified, the hydroxyl is missing from the 2-position. Deoxynucleotides are the monomer units for DNA. Dideoxynucleotide: a modified deoxynucleotide, in which both the 2- and 3-hydroxyl groups are missing. Dideoxynucleotides are used as chain terminators for DNA sequencing. DNA polymerases normally add the next nucleotide to the 3-hydroxyl of the previous nucleotide; if the previous nucleotide lacks a 3-hydroxyl, adding another nucleotide is impossible. DNA (deoxyribonucleic acid): the genetic material of some viruses and all known nonviral organisms. DNA is a deoxyribonucleotide polymer comprised of four types of bases (adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and thymine (T)). The specific base sequence, in the presence of cellular structures, determines the role of the DNA (i.e. coding regions, non-coding control regions, regions of other, less well defined functions, or regions with no known function). DNase: any of a number of enzymes capable of hydrolyzing DNA into small fragments. Unlike restriction enzymes, DNase does not exhibit any sequence specificity, and will cleave essentially any DNA strand into smaller fragments. Humans secrete DNase; it is therefore necessary to avoid contact between
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human skin and any valuable DNA samples. DNase is rapidly inactivated by heating to 68C. DTT (dithiothreitol): a commonly used reducing agent. Mercaptoethanol and DTT are used to maintain the cysteine residues in the free sulfhydryl form, although DTT is somewhat more effective and somewhat more stable in aqueous solution. EDTA (ethylenediamine tetraacetic acid): a chelating agent used in many buffers to sequester metal ions that may affect biochemical systems. EDTA inhibits calcium-dependent proteases by reducing the free calcium concentration. Elution: the process of allowing protein to dissociate from a column resin. Elution usually involves altering the running buffer to decrease the strength of the interaction between the protein and the resin. Exon: a DNA sequence that becomes part of the mature mRNA. Exons may include both coding and non-coding sequences. Expression: in molecular biology, synthesis of RNA or (usually) protein from a DNA coding sequence. Expression vector: a plasmid designed for expression of foreign proteins in a particular host cell (often E. coli). In addition to the normal features of a plasmid, expression vectors contain a strong promoter and ribosome-binding site upstream of unique restriction sites intended to allow the insertion of foreign DNA. Extinction coefficient (): the Beer-Lambert law (A = cl) proportionality constant that relates absorbance to concentration for a given molecule at a given wavelength in a cuvette of a given pathlength. The extinction coefficient is dependent on the probability that the molecule will absorb light at the applicable wavelength. Frame: short for Reading frame (see below). Gel filtration chromatography: a technique for separating molecules on the basis of size. Gel filtration resins contain small pores; small molecules enter the pores, while larger molecules cannot. Thus, large molecules experience a smaller total volume in the column, and elute first, followed by other molecules in order of decreasing size. Gel filtration chromatography can be used in purification techniques, or can be used analytically to measure the apparent molecular weight of molecules and folded proteins in solution. (Note: this technique is also called gel permeation or size exclusion chromatography.) Genetic code: the algorithm that cells use to translate nucleic sequences into protein sequences. Exon sequences are essentially a substitution code; each group of three bases ( i.e. each codon) defines an amino acid. Since organisms require only 20 amino acids and a stop signal, while the code includes 64 possible codons (43), the code contains some redundancy (for example, the genetic code contains 6 codons for the amino acid serine).
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Although the control elements (such as promoters) may differ markedly between species, nearly all organisms translate nucleic acid sequences into proteins using the same code, and therefore, foreign DNA expressed in an organism nearly always results in the same protein sequence as is found in the parent organism. However, all organisms do not use all codons with the same frequency. Some prokaryotes use tRNA availability as one method for regulating protein synthesis rates. Some foreign proteins are poorly expressed in E. coli due to large numbers of rare codons (i.e. having corresponding tRNAs that are produced in relatively small amounts). A rare codon frequency of 15% or less usually results in high expression, unless the rare codons are in close proximity to one another in the coding sequence. Genetic Code Second Position First Position T T TTT TTC TTA TTG CTT CTC CTA CTG ATT ATC ATA ATG GTT GTC GTA GTG Phe Phe Leu Leu Leu Leu Leu Leu Ile Ile Ile Met Val Val Val Val C TCT TCC TCA TCG CCT CCC CCA CCG ACT ACC ACA ACG GCT GCC GCA GCG Ser Ser Ser Ser Pro Pro Pro Pro Thr Thr Thr Thr Ala Ala Ala Ala A TAT TAC TAA TAG CAT CAC CAA CAG AAT AAC AAA AAG GAT GAC GAA GAG Tyr Tyr Stop Stop His His Gln Gln Asn Asn Lys Lys Asp Asp Glu Glu G TGT TGC TGA TGG CGT CGC CGA CGG AGT AGC AGA AGG GGT GGC GGA GGG Cys Cys Stop Trp Arg Arg Arg Arg Ser Ser Arg Arg Gly Gly Gly Gly Third Position T C A G T C A G T C A G T C A G
Italics indicates preferred tRNA in E. coli. Bold indicates minor tRNA in E. coli. Adapted from: Biased Codon Usage: An exploration of its role in optimization of translation. In: Maximizing Gene Expression, pp. 225-285, 1986. Genotype: the genetic makeup of an organism. In most cases, the genotype of a given organism is assumed to be identical to that of the wild-type unless explicitly stated to be mutated. A large number of E. coli strains with known mutations are available; many of these mutations result in characteristics useful for various molecular biological applications. 135
Gradient: in column chromatography, a gradual change in the concentration of some component of the running buffer. Gradients can be smooth (typically linear, unless computer controlled pumps are used) or step. A smooth gradient involves a constantly changing concentration of the component(s) of the running buffer. A step gradient uses a constant concentration of the component, followed one or more times by the use of a new solution containing a different concentration the component. HPLC (high performance liquid chromatography): a form of chromatographic technique that uses sophisticated high-pressure pumps to move the liquid phase through the column. HPLC pumps are capable of generating pressure of 50 megaPascals or more (over 7000 pounds per square inch). HPLC columns are designed to withstand high pressures, although most HPLC columns will be damaged by the maximum pressure output of the pump. Hydrophobic interaction chromatography: a technique for separating molecules on the basis of their ability to interact with hydrophobic functional groups covalently attached to a resin. Incubation: storage under defined conditions, especially at a controlled temperature. Induction: in molecular biology, to cause initiation of transcription of a gene by some external intervention. For example, IPTG is used to induce expression of genes under control of several lac-derived promoters used in expression vectors. Ion exchange chromatography: a technique for separating molecules on the basis of charge. Ion exchange resins contain charged groups; proteins containing amino acid residues of opposite charge will bind to the charged groups. Raising the ionic strength (usually by raising the salt concentration) of the running buffer causes proteins to elute from the column. Ionic strength: a measure of the total amount of charged species present in a 1 solution. Mathematically, ionic strength = Ci Zi2 , where Ci is the 2 i th concentration of the i species present, and Zi is the charge on that species. IPTG (isopropylthio- -D-galactoside): a non-hydrolyzable carbohydrate derivative. IPTG binds to the lac repressor, causing its dissociation from lac promoter elements, and consequent activation of transcription from the promoter. Most promoter elements used to drive expression of engineered genes are derived from the lac promoter; in most strains of E. coli, transcription of the engineered gene only occurs in the presence of lactose or synthetic analogs such as IPTG. Intron: a DNA sequence that is transcribed and then removed during mRNA maturation. Mammalian genes frequently contain hundreds of kilobases of DNA; after the introns are removed the residual mRNA is usually less than ten kilobases long. Because mammalian DNA contains introns, and because prokaryotes lack the ability to remove introns, mammalian genomic DNA cannot be used directly as a source of genetic material for expression of mammalian 136
proteins in bacteria. Instead, it is necessary to use cDNA (i.e. reverse transcribed mature mRNA) as the source of genetic material. K-12: a wild-type strain of E. coli, from which many laboratory E. coli strains have been derived. Kinase: an enzyme that phosphorylates its substrate, generally using ATP as the phosphate donor. Most kinases are specific for certain types of substrates (for example, Protein Kinase C phosphorylates specific proteins on specific serine and threonine residues). Polynucleotide kinase phosphorylates free 5-hydroxyl groups of DNA, and is therefore frequently used to prepare DNA lacking a 5-phosphate for ligation reactions. Lag-phase: the period during which bacteria grow slowly after being taken from an environment in which nutrients are limiting to an environment in which nutrients are plentiful (for normal E. coli, this period is usually 1-2 hours). LB (Luria-Bertani broth): a commonly used rich bacterial growth medium. Rich media contain all of the nutrients required for cell growth. (This is in contrast to minimal media, which contain only a few minerals, a carbon source, and a nitrogen source, and therefore require the cells to synthesize all of the required metabolites.) LDH (lactate dehydrogenase): a ubiquitous nicotinamide coenzyme-dependent oxidoreductase that interconverts pyruvate and lactate. LDH is expressed in relatively large amounts in some tissues, and is an easily purified, stable protein. Ligase: an enzyme that catalyzes the formation of a covalent bond between a 5phosphorylated and a 3-free-hydroxyl end of a DNA strand. The function of a ligase is thus to connect two DNA fragments. The bacteriophage T4-derived ligase commonly used in molecular biology uses ATP as a co-substrate. Ligase is inhibited by a number of impurities that may be present in DNA samples. Ligation: in molecular biology, a reaction in which two fragments of (usually) doublestranded DNA are connected together. Load: in column chromatography, the process of allowing a protein-containing solution to enter a column, usually under conditions in which the protein of interest would be expected to bind to the resin. In gel electrophoresis, the process of placing a sample within a well on the gel prior to the application of a potential gradient to separate the components of the sample. Log-phase: the process of rapidly growing in an environment rich in nutrients. Bacteria in log-phase divide every 20-40 minutes (in contrast, human cells divide roughly every 24 hours). During log-phase growth, bacteria express a group of genes somewhat different from those expressed during stationary phase. MCS (multiple cloning site): a region of a plasmid containing a number of unique restriction sites that is intended as the insertion site for foreign DNA. In expression vectors, the MCS is located in close proximity to the promoter and 137
other signal sequences that drive transcription and translation of the inserted gene. Mismatch: in molecular biology, a base, or series of bases, which do not form base pairs with the corresponding bases on the opposite strand. The presence of mismatches implies that one strand has undergone a mutation. Synthetic oligonucleotides frequently contain a few mismatches to create desired mutations (usually to create restriction sites, or to create modified protein sequences); note that the presence of too many mismatches will prevent the oligonucleotide from binding to its intended complementary strand. mRNA (messenger RNA): a single-stranded RNA that contains a protein coding sequence and 5- and 3-untranslated regions which contain control elements. Most mRNAs in multicellular organisms contain a poly-A tail (astretch of multiple adenosine residues at the 3-end), which allows the isolation of mRNA; this is not true in bacteria, and therefore bacterial mRNA usually cannot be separated from other bacterial RNAs. Nucleotide: a compound containing a purine or pyrimidine base attached to ribose phosphate. Nucleotides are the monomer units for RNA; nucleotides are also used for metabolic reactions and for intracellular signaling. Oligonucleotide: a short, usually single-stranded sequence of (usually) DNA. Most oligonucleotides are synthesized using chemical methods; oligonucleotides are also the product of extensive digestion of nucleic acids with hydrolytic enzymes. Open reading frame (ORF): a sequence of DNA that begins with ATG and ends with an in-frame stop codon, often used to refer to DNA sequences not certainly identified as being actively expressed (i.e. not known to be genes). In most cases, to be identified as an ORF the region must be long enough (>200 bases) to code for a peptide of reasonable size (few coding regions smaller than ~200 bases have been observed). Ori (origin of replication): a DNA sequence in a plasmid required for replication of DNA in bacteria. Palindrome: a sequence of characters that reads identically in both forward and reverse direction. In molecular biology, a palindromic sequence is one in which the one strand has the same sequence as the complementary strand. For example, AAGCTT is a palindrome (the complementary strand also reads 5-AAGCTT). Most (although not all) restriction enzyme recognition sequences are palindromic (AAGCTT is a HindIII site). Phenyl sepharose: a hydrophobic interaction chromatography resin, in which phenyl groups are covalently attached to sepharose (a cross-linked carbohydrate derivative). Plasmid: a circular double-stranded non-chromosomal DNA molecule that bacteria will replicate. Most plasmids contain a gene for antibiotic resistance, an origin of replication, and one or more genes of interest to the researcher. 138
Plasmid prep: a procedure for purifying plasmid DNA from bacteria. In most cases, the cells are lysed with detergent (usually SDS) and high pH, followed by precipitation of chromosomal DNA; the procedure then uses one of a variety of methods of separating the plasmid DNA from residual contaminants (soluble proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and other molecules). PMSF (phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride): a commonly used protease inhibitor. PMSF is an irreversible inhibitor of serine proteases. It has limited solubility and limited stability in aqueous solutions, and is toxic; alternative inhibitors of serine proteases have been developed that lack these drawbacks, but that are considerably more expensive. Polymerase chain reaction (PCR): a technique for producing large amounts of a specific DNA fragment from a small amount of mixed DNA sequences. Briefly, a sample of DNA is heated to ~94C (to separate the strands), the temperature is lowered to 37-60C to allow binding of specific oligonucleotides to the ends of the sequence of interest, and a polymerase is used to replicate the sequence 3 to the oligonucleotides; this procedure is then repeated 20-50 times. In most cases, the polymerase used is heat-stable (the polymerase is usually derived from a bacterium that prefers living at 70-100C), and therefore the polymerase only needs to be added at the beginning of the process. The chain reaction occurs because each cycle results in an increased amount (roughly a doubling) of DNA that can act as a template for further DNA synthesis. Primer: a short oligonucleotide sequence complementary to a sequence of interest. Most DNA polymerases cannot begin synthesizing nucleic acids without a template and at least a short region of double stranded nucleic acid to act as a starting place. Primers act as the necessary starting place for nucleic acid synthesis for a variety of molecular biological techniques, including PCR and DNA sequencing. Promoter: a DNA sequence recognized by the transcription machinery (i.e. proteins involved in the synthesis of RNA from DNA). Promoters act as signals for initiation of RNA synthesis. Expression vectors typically contain strong promoters, such as the trc promoter, that are used to initiate mRNA synthesis using the inserted foreign gene as a template. Reading frame: each codon has three bases; if the sequence is read beginning with one base, the translated protein will have a difference sequence from a protein translated beginning with the following base. For example, the sequence ATGTGGTAA codes for Met-Trp-Stop if read from the first base, x-Cys-Gly-x (the x refer to the partial codons) if read beginning with the second base, and x-ValVal-x) if read beginning with the third base. In this example, the TAA stop codon is in-frame with the methionine codon, but not with the cysteine or valine codons in the other reading frames. Recombinant DNA: genetic material that has been engineered in some fashion. Most commonly, the term recombinant DNA refers to coding sequences taken from one organism and placed in another organism to allow expression of the foreign gene in the new environment. 139
Replication: the process of synthesizing a new DNA strand using the preexisting strand as a template. In normal cells, the result of replication is a doubling of the total amount of DNA, and only occurs immediately prior to cell division, with each daughter cell receiving one complete set of DNA molecules. Repressor: a protein that prevents transcription from a promoter element. In most cases, repressors release from DNA in the presence of cellular stimuli. For example the lac repressor binds DNA in the absence, but not the presence of lactose; as a result, only when lactose is present in its environment does E. coli expend energy synthesizing the enzymes necessary to metabolize lactose. Repressor/promoter pairs are used in molecular biology to allow protein expression only under desired conditions. Resin: an insoluble material, usually a modified carbohydrate polymer, used to form the matrix of a column. More generally, the term resin applies both to the insoluble polymer, and to the polymer that has been derivatized with functional groups that allow separation of proteins. Thus, DEAE-cellulose is an anionexchange resin. Restriction enzyme: an enzyme that cleaves specific sequences of double-stranded DNA. For example, Nco I cleaves CCATGG between the two C; because it cleaves both strands the same way; digestion with Nco I leaves a four base stretch of single-stranded DNA extending from the 5 end. This four-base overhang is called a sticky end. (Restriction enzymes are one mechanism that bacteria use to degrade foreign DNA. Each wild-type strain contains a restriction enzyme and a methylase. The methylase tags the host cell DNA with methyl groups on A or C residues of specific sequences; this modification prevents degradation of the host cells own DNA by the endogenous restriction enzyme. Laboratory strains typically have the restriction enzyme system inactivated to prevent the degradation of introduced plasmid DNA (for example, in K-12-derived E. coli strains, hsdRMS mutants have both restriction enzyme EcoKI and the corresponding methylase genes deleted, while hsdR17 (rK- m K+) mutants have the EcoKI gene inactivated, but retain the methylase). Note, however, that some foreign (e.g., commercially available) restriction enzymes will not cleave DNA when the host cell methylation patterns alter the bases in their recognition sequence.) Reverse transcriptase: a specialized DNA polymerase, usually derived from a retrovirus, capable of using RNA as a template for DNA synthesis. The normal paradigm for information flow within a cell is from DNA to RNA to protein; reverse transcriptases were given their name to reflect the fact that these enzymes alter this standard direction of information flow. RNA (ribonucleic acid): a polymer of nucleotides normally containing four types of bases (adenine (A), cytosine (C), guanine (G), and uracil (U)), although some forms of RNA include additional types of nucleotide residues. RNA molecules have varying functions, most of these functions being involved with protein synthesis. In some viruses, RNA acts as the sole genetic material.
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RNase: any of a number of enzymes capable of hydrolyzing RNA into small fragments. Unlike DNase, most isozymes of RNase are very stable enzymes that are extraordinarily resistant to heat inactivation. Because humans (and most other species) secrete RNase, and because RNase is much more difficult than DNase to inactivate, working with RNA is somewhat more challenging than working with DNA. Running buffer: the solution (for proteins, almost exclusively an aqueous solution) used for chromatography. Running buffers usually contain a pH-buffering species as well as salts and other molecules designed to either enhance or prevent binding of proteins to column resins. Alternatively, the term running buffer is sometimes used to describe the electrophoresis tank buffer used for running electrophoretic gels. Scintillation counter: an instrument for measuring radioactivity. In scintillation counting, radioactive decay excites organic molecules (scintillants); the molecules emit the energy in the form of light that is detected by the counter. Scintillation fluid: a solution that aids in the detection and quantitation of radioactivity. The solution contains scintillants, which are molecules that emit absorbed energy (in this case, from radioactive decay) in the form of light. Screening: a method for finding desirable cells in a mixture of cells by a process that requires testing by the investigator. Selection: a method for separating desired from undesirable cells based on ability to survive and/or grow. One common selection technique is to grow cells in the presence of an antibiotic. Start codon: a sequence that signals initiation of translation. Most genes use the sequence AUG (frequently referred to as ATG, because the AUG is derived from the ATG sequence found in the DNA); a few genes use GUG. Stationary phase: in column chromatography, the solid resin support material that allows the molecules of interest to separate. Stationary phase: in molecular biology, the period of little or no growth that occurs when the nutrients in an environment have been consumed, or when waste products have reached toxic levels. Stationary phase involves an adaptive response, in which the cells alter the genes being expressed to allow survival under limiting conditions. Sticky end: the segment of single-stranded DNA extending 5 or 3 from a double stranded DNA fragment following digestion by a restriction enzyme that is capable of base-pairing to a compatible end of another DNA fragment (or the opposite end of the same fragment). Note: sticky end is a slang term; the technical term is cohesive end; however, few people use the term cohesive end except when writing formal papers.
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Stop codon: a nucleotide sequence that signals the termination of translation. Three stop codons are commonly used: UAA, UGA, and UAG (frequently referred to as TAA, TGA, and TAG). Many laboratory strains of E. coli contain a suppressor tRNA for TAG stop codons; it is therefore preferable to avoid TAG as a stop codon in engineered DNA sequences intended for use in E. coli. Suppressor tRNA: a tRNA that binds what is ordinarily a stop codon, but allows protein synthesis to continue by inserting an amino acid instead of terminating translation. In effect, the suppressor tRNA converts the stop codon into a codon for the amino acid. Many laboratory strains of E. coli contain TAG suppressor codons (especially supE, which inserts glutamate, or supF, which inserts phenylalanine). Transcription: the process of synthesizing RNA from a DNA template. (Derived from the standard English term for converting information from one form to another: e.g., verbal English is transcribed into written English; nucleic acid information is converted to a different type of nucleic acid information.) Transformation: the process of inducing cells to take up DNA from their environment. Transforming bacteria involves using a salt solution to make competent cells. Translation: the process of synthesizing protein from an RNA template. (Derived from the standard English term for converting information from one language to another; information in the form of nucleic acid is converted to a different language: protein.) Tris (tris-(hydroxymethyl) aminomethane): a buffer commonly used for biochemical experiments . Tris rarely interferes in biochemical reactions, and is inexpensive. However, Tris has a relatively high pK a (8.1 at 25C). In addition, the pKa value for Tris changes by 0.031 pH units per C, resulting in a large temperaturedependent pH variation in Tris buffers. tRNA (transfer RNA): a small RNA molecule that mediates the incorporation of amino acid residues into a growing protein chain. Each tRNA is specific for one type of amino acid, and contains a sequence complementary to the corresponding codon. Vector: an entity or mechanism for transmitting biological information. In molecular biology, this term is often used to refer to plasmid DNA, especially if the plasmid DNA contains a foreign gene and elements to drive transcription and translation of that gene.
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