Nickel Affinity Chromatography Flashcards
How is the stationary phase in resin functionalized?
With a chemical group specific to the tag that is fused to protein of interest
How can nickel affinity chromatography be used?
To isolate protein of interest in a singe step (column or batch method)
How is nickel affinity chromatography eluted?
Using a variety of methods (competitive ligand most common)
What is done after nickel affinity chromatography?
Mass spectrometry to unambiguously identify purified proteins
What do mass spectrometry instruments do?
Produce, separate, and detect the m/z ratio of ionized molecules present in the gas phase (held at vacuum)
What are a couple of key features of mass spectrometry?
- High mass accuracy and sensitivity
- Capable of elucidating chemical composition
What is key to mass determination?
Ionization since only ions in the gas phase can be accurately measured
What did ionization techniques become in the late 1980’s?
“Soft enough” to study large macromolecules such as proteins and oligonucleotides
What is protein mass spectrometry used for?
- Protein identification
- Mapping of post-translational modifications
- Quantitative proteomics
- Clinical chemistry
- Structure-function insights including protein conformation dynamics
What are the steps for protein mass spectrometry?
1) Trypsin hydrolyzes peptide bond C-terminal to Arg and Lys residues
2) Tryptic peptides are measured, and a mass fingerprint is generated
3) Individual tryptic peptides are isolated and fragmented to produce amino acid sequence
4) Collectively, multiple peptide sequences leads to protein identification using database processing