Week 12 (biochemical Methods III) Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the theory of electrophoresis

A

-A molecule with a net charge will move in an electric field
- The speed (velocity, v) at which the molecule moves depends upon;
-the strength of the electric field, E
-the net charge on the molecule, z
-the frictional coefficient, f (how much drag it experiences)
v = Ez/f

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2
Q

Which gels is Electrophoresis is carried out in?

A

Polymer gels such as:
agarose
polyacrylamide

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3
Q

What is the purpose of gels in electrophoresis?

A

These gels form a mesh like structure, which acts like a molecular sieve

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4
Q

How do small/large molecules move through the mesh?

A
  • small molecules can move through the mesh easily

- large molecules move slowly through the mesh

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5
Q

How can electrophoresis be altered to give the best resolution for the molecules you are interested in?

A

-Can alter the concentration (%) of agarose/acrylamide in the gel
need to choose the concentration that gives the best resolution for the molecules you are interested in
-Can also make gradient gels – from 20% acrylamide at the bottom to 4% acrylamide at the top – can increase the resolution

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6
Q

How far do large/ small molecules travel respectively?

A
  • Smallest molecules travel furthest

- Large molecules move less

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7
Q

what are the applications of electrophoresis?

A

Proteins
DNA
RNA

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8
Q

What are the analytical applications of electrophoresis?

A
  • Allows you to check the purity of samples
  • Visualise the number of different molecules in a sample
  • Estimate molecular mass
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9
Q

What is the main advantageous property of electrophoresis?

A

Allows you to separate & visualise the components in your sample

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10
Q

Explain Agarose gel electrophoresis based on the structure of DNA

A
  • Phosphate groups in the backbone
  • One charge per nucleotide, thus all fragments of DNA have the same ratio of charge to mass.
  • Use agarose gels as these have larger pores (acrylamide pores are too small)
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11
Q

Explain the process of agarose gel electrophoresis for DNA?

A

-Form wells using a comb before the agarose sets
-Mix DNA with loading dye and then add to wells
Loading dye contains:
-Glycerol – dense, causes sample to sink in the wells
-Bromophenol blue – a dye, allows you to track progress as the dye moves through the gel at the front

  • In one well load a DNA ladder
  • A series of DNA fragments of known length
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12
Q

What is used to visualise the DNA?

A
  • ethidium bromide
  • A fluorescent dye that intercalates with the DNA
  • Expose the gel to UV light
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13
Q

SDS-PAGE for proteins

A

Proteins can have a wide range of different charges and shapes
Proteins can have a wide range of different shapes
Both of these can affect the velocity & migration of a protein in electrophoresis

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14
Q

The shape of the protein can affect the velocity migration, how can this be overcome?

A

To overcome this we use SDS-Poly-acrylamide Gel Electrophoresis

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15
Q

What does SDS stand for?

A

Sodium dodecyl sulphate

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16
Q

What is SDS?

A

Is a detergent – denatures proteins
•loss of 2° & 3° structure
•only 1° structure remains

17
Q

Is SDS positively charged?

What does the charge mean for the proteins?

A

No
Is negatively charged
•large number of SDS molecules bound to each protein means all proteins have a large negative charge overall
•roughly constant mass to charge ratio

18
Q

Explain the process of SDS-PAGE for proteins

A
  1. Mix protein sample with Laemmli sample buffer
  2. glycerol – dense
    bromophenol blue – tracker dye
    SDS – denature protein & give it negative charge
    β-me/DTT – break disulphide bonds
  3. Heat sample
    Ensures that full denaturation occurs
    Not good for membrane proteins because it makes them aggregate
  4. Load on gel & apply voltage
    Include a lane of molecular weight standards
19
Q

What can be done to visualise the proteins?

A

use a stain such as Coomassie Blue

Initially whole gel goes blue

Destain (contains the same solvents as the stain but none of the dye) – blue disappears from the regions where there is no protein

The staining is fairly quantitative
More protein= more stain

20
Q

What is an alternative stain to Coomassie Blue?

A

silver stain – get black/brown staining of proteins
More sensitive than Coomassie- better for dilute samples
More expensive & time consuming than Coomassie

21
Q

What is the number of negative charges in DNA directly proportional to?

A

The size of DNA

22
Q

Where are the wells?

A

At the top

Biggest molecules at the top and the smallest at the bottom

23
Q

What can be done to break disulphide bonds (in the tertiary structure)?

A

Add a reducing agent

24
Q

Are SDS pages run vertically ?

A

Yes

25
Q

What would a homodimer produce?

A

A single band

26
Q

What would a heterodimer produce?

A

2 distance

27
Q

What is the molecular migration

A

Distance from log to band

28
Q

What do you do to find the molecular mass?

A

Add together the molecular weights of each band (kilo Daltons)