Week 13 (Biochemical Methods IV) Flashcards

1
Q

Separating/analysing molecules by affinity

A
  • Affinity chromatography
  • Western blotting
  • ELISA
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2
Q

Affinity chromatography: stationary phase

A

Affinity beads

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3
Q

Affinity chromatography: mobile phase

A

Liquid around the beads

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4
Q

Affinity chromatography matrix- Ligand on matrix :Item to be purified

A

(Ligand on matrix :Item to be purified)

Specific peptide sequence:Antibodies

Specific DNA sequence:Transcription factors

ATP:Protein that binds ATP

Nickel column:His-tagged protein

GSH:GST-tagged protein

Maltose:MBP-tagged protein

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5
Q

What is affinity chromatography matrix useful for?

A
  • Used very frequently these days for recombinant proteins.
  • Molecular biology used to add extra amino acids to the end of your protein of interest to enable easy purification. The tag can often then be cleaved off enzymatically
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6
Q

What are the advantages of affinity chromatography?

A

Easy

Excellent purification

Quick

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7
Q

What are the disadvantages of affinity chromatography?

A

Not possible for all proteins, especially those harvested from natural sources

Tags on proteins can affect expression or function

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8
Q

blocking- 1st step How do we visualise the protein of interest?

A

1st step – blocking

Membrane with transferred proteins bound The membrane loves to bind protein, need to ‘block’ all the remaining sites where proteins haven’t bound from the transfer Wash the membrane in 4% milk solution or BSA

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9
Q

Primary antibody- 2nd step

A

2nd step – 1° Antibody Need an antibody specific for your protein of interest Place the membrane in a solution containing your 1° antibody

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10
Q

Washing’s- 3rd step

A

3rd step – washing Any non-specifically bound antibody will be washed off Leaving antibody bound only where it is bound to the specific protein of interest

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11
Q

antibodies bind to their antigens with

A

very high affinity

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12
Q

Secondary antibody- 4th step

A

4th step – 2° Antibody An antibody that recognises the 1° antibody Antigen binding sites - antigen specific Constant region - animal specific ie. all antibodies produced in mice have a common sequence in this region, that differs from antibodies produced in rabbits or goats.

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13
Q

Washing (again) - 5th step

A

5th step – washing Any non-specifically bound antibody will be washed off Leaving antibody bound only where it is bound to the specific protein of interest

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14
Q

Developing-6th step

A

Place the membrane in a solution containing the substrate for the enzyme that is conjugated to the 2° antibody

Enzyme reaction will occur only at position where the 2° antibody is located

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15
Q

What happens If alkaline phosphatase enzyme is used in developing?

A

produces a purple band on the membrane wherever the protein of interest is located

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16
Q

What happens if horeseradish peroxidase enzyme is used in developing?

A

produces light.

Need to expose to film and will get a band on the film wherever the protein of interest is located

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17
Q

Use of Western Blotting

A

Protein visualisation/analysis

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18
Q

Advantages of western blotting?

A

Specificity Sensitivity (even in complex mixtures)

19
Q

Disadvantages of Western blotting?

A

Not possible to extract the protein, only visualise Time-consuming

20
Q

What is ELISA?

A

Enzyme-linked immunosorbant assay

21
Q

What can be used to detect & quantify a protein in solution?

A

antibodies

22
Q

what is Indirect ELISA used for?

A

For quantitating amount of an antibody in a sample

23
Q

What are the steps in indirect ELISA? *

A
  1. There is an antigen coated well 2.Block with non specific protein 3.Add sample and if it contains antibodies they binds to antigen 4. Wash Add enzyme-linked 2° (secondary) antibody 5. Wash 6.Add enzyme substrate 7. Measure absorbance (typically turns yellow)
24
Q

What Is Sandwich ELISA used for?

A

For quantitating amount of an antigen in a sample

25
Q

What are the steps in sandwhich ELISA?

A
  1. Antibody coated well 2.Block-with non specific protein 3.Add sample 5. Antigen (If present) binds to antibody 6.Wash 7.Add enzyme-slinked second antibody 8.Wash 9.Add enzyme substrate 10.Measure absorbance
26
Q

What is the main use of ELISA?

A

Protein detection/quantitation Detection and quantisation of small molecules

27
Q

advantages of ELISA

A

Specificity Sensitivity (even in complex mixtures) Quantitative

28
Q

Disadvantages of ELISA

A

Time consuming Average of all the molecules in a solution even if in different states

29
Q

What does transfer involve?

A

Transfer from SDS page to nitrocellulose or PVDF membrane

30
Q

What is Mass spectrometry?

A

Precise and sensitive measurement of atomic composition of a molecule without prior knowledge of its identity

31
Q

What can you find out from mass spectrometry?

A

The mass of a protein can be precisely determined - give info on the identity and chemical state of a protein A protein can be identified from the pattern of peptide fragments formed after treatment with a specific protease A peptide can be sequenced Oligosaccharides can be sequenced Lipid species can be identified

32
Q

What are the main components of mass spectrometry?

A

Mass spectrometers convert analyte into gaseous charged forms (gas-phase ions) A mass analyzer separates the ions according to size A detector measures the abundance of each ion

33
Q

Forming gas-phase ions Two most commonly used techniques to form gas-phase ions of large biochemicals are:

A

MALDI (Matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionisation) ESI (Electrospray ionisation)

34
Q

What is MALDI?

A

Sample is dried down in the presence of a volatile compound (matrix). A laser excites & vaporises the matrix converting the sample into the gas phase. Gaseous collisions cause ionisation.

35
Q

What is ESI?

A

Sample in solution is passed through an electrically charged nozzle into a chamber of very low pressure, evaporating the solvent and giving the charged gaseous analyte

36
Q

A commonly used mass analyzer is:

A

TOF Time of flight Gaseous ions are accelerated through an elongated chamber under a fixed electrostatic potential. A smaller ion will move through the chamber faster than a large one of the same charge.

37
Q

Identification of proteins using mass spec

A

Identify a spot or band in a gel Cut it out Digest with trypsin Run on mass spec. Identify the protein from the pattern of peptide fragments by comparing with a database

38
Q

Peptide sequencing

A

After going through one mass analyzer (to separate different peptides) Bombard peptide with an inert gas to break it up Enter 2nd mass analyser Identify amino acid sequence Called ‘tandem mass spec.’ or ms/ms

39
Q

Post-translational modifications

A

Post-translational modifications are critical to the function of many proteins eg. Glycosylation Phosphorylation

40
Q

Phosphorylation will increase the mass of the peptide that is phosphorylated – what can mass spectrometry detect?

A

amount and position of phosphorylation

41
Q

What would happen if your sample did not contain any antigen?

A

There would be no second antibody binding therefore no signal would be produced

42
Q

Which test is ELISA commonly used in?

A

HIV

43
Q

start with an SDS page

A
44
Q

western transfer

A