SDS-PAGE
Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)–polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE)
The method is based on - the separation of proteins according to size
Used
– Separation of proteins
determine the relative molecular mass
of proteins
SDS
(CH3-(CH2)10-CH2OSO3-
Na+) → is an anionic detergent
Buffer-
- β-mercaptoethanol – reduces/breaks disulphide bonds in protein tertiary structure & converted to linear primary structure
SDS - denatures the protein- bromophenol blue – is an ionisable tracking dye which use to monitor the electrophoretic run
- sucrose or glycerol - gives the sample solution density which helps to settle the sample at the bottom of loading well
- Tris- HCl – gives the solution its pH buffering capacity
loading dye -
- help to get know when to switch off
- show how goodly separated.
negatively charged SDS molecules binds for every two amino acid residues in denatured liner polypeptide chain.
2
parts in the gel.
Stacking
Gel
|
Separating/Resolving
Gel
|
1st part of the gel
|
2nd part of the gel
|
pH is 6.8
|
pH is 8.8
|
Have larger pore size(4% acrylamide)
|
Have smaller pore size(10-15%
acrylamide/polyacrylamide)
|
Comparatively short ( 0.8cm)
|
Comparatively long ( 5cm)
|
stacking gel
stacking gel - concentrate the protein
sample into a sharp band before it enters the main separating gel.
This
is achieved by using differences in ionic strength and pH between the
electrophoresis buffer and the stacking gel buffer.
Negatively
increases as follows in stacking gel-
glycinate
ions < protein–SDS complexes < chloride ions (Cl-)
so,
in this protein-SDS complex is stacked between glycinate ions & chloride
ions (Cl-). Due to this called
as stacking gel
(glycine
isoelectric point is 5.95. so, glycinate ions have slight negativity.)
- Conductivity inversely proportional Field strength
- Conductivity proportional to concentration
Separating/Resolving Gel
When glycinate reaches the separating gel it becomes more fully
ionized in the higher pH environment and its mobility increases
Due
to this, negatively increases as follows in separating gel-
protein–SDS
complexes< glycinate ions< chloride ions (Cl-)
then,
- the smaller the protein - the more easily it can pass through the pores of the gel,
- large proteins - are successively retarded by frictional resistance due to the sieving effect of the gels.
- Due to this protein are separate on the basis of their size.
- When the dye reaches the bottom of the gel, the current is turned off
- Stain with an appropriate stain solution (usually Coomassie Brilliant Blue) and then washed in destain solution
- The destain solution - removes unbound background dye from the gel, leaving stained proteins visible as blue bands on a clear background
Gels
of 15% polyacrylamide are therefore
useful for separating proteins in the range
Mr 100 000 to 10 000
· A pure protein should give a
single band on an SDS–polyacrylamide gel