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SDS-PAGE From Wikipedia, the free encyclop edia "PAGE" redirects here. For other uses, see Page (disambiguation). Picture of an SDS-PAGE. The molecular marker is in the left lane SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacry lamide gel electrophoresis , is a technique widely used in biochemistry , forensics, genetics and molecular biology to separate proteins according to their electrophoret ic mobility (a function of length of polypeptide chain or molecular weight). SDS gel electrophoresis of samples that have identical charge per unit mass due to binding of SDS results in f ractionation by size. Contents [hide] 1 Procedure  o 1.1 Tissue preparation o 1.2 Preparing acrylamide gels  o 1.3 Electrophoresis  o 1.4 Staining 2 Chemical ingredients and their roles  o 2.1 Stacking gel  o 2.2 Chemical ingredients  o 2.3 Chemicals for processing and visualization  3 Reducing SDS-PAGE 4 Silver staining 5 Buffer systems 

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SDS-PAGE

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

"PAGE" redirects here. For other uses, see Page (disambiguation).

Picture of an SDS-PAGE. The molecular marker is in the left lane

SDS-PAGE, sodium dodecyl sulfate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, is a technique widely used inbiochemistry, forensics, genetics and molecular biology to

separate proteins according to their electrophoretic mobility (a function of length of polypeptide chain or molecular weight). SDS gel electrophoresis of samples that have identical charge per 

unit mass due to binding of SDS results in f ractionation by size.

Contents

[hide] 

1 Procedure 

o  1.1Tissue preparation 

o  1.2 Preparing acrylamide gels 

o  1.3Electrophoresis 

o  1.4 Staining 

2 Chemical ingredients and their roles 

o  2.1 Stacking gel 

o  2.2Chemical ingredients 

o  2.3Chemicals for processing and visualization 

3 Reducing SDS-PAGE 

4 Silver staining 

5 Buffer systems 

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  6 SDS gradient gel electrophoresis of proteins 

7 See also 

8 References 

9 External links 

[edit]Procedure

[edit]Tissue preparation

Samples may be taken from whole tissue or from cell culture. In most cases, solid tissues are first broken down mechanically using a blender (for larger sample volumes), using

a homogenizer  (smaller volumes), by sonicator or by using cycling of high pressure. Cells may also be broken open by one of the above mechanical methods. However, it should be noted that

bacteria, virus or environmental samples can be the source of protein and thus SDS-PAGE is not restricted to cellular studies only.

A combination of biochemical and mechanical techniques ± including various types of filtration and centrifugation± can be used to separate different cell compartments and organelles.

The solution of proteins to be analyzed is mixed with SDS, an anionic detergent which denatures secondary and non±disulfide±linked tertiary structures, and applies a negative charge to each

protein in proportion to its mass. Heating the samples to at least 60 degrees C shakes up the molecules, helping SDS to bind. [1] [2] [3] [4] 

A tracking dye may be a dded to the protein solution (of a size smaller than protein) to allow the experimenter to track the progress of the protein solution through the gel during the

electrophoretic run.

[edit]Preparing acrylamide gels

The gels generally consist of acrylamide, bisacrylamide, SDS, and a Tris-Cl buffer with adjusted pH. The solution is degassed under a vacuum to prevent air bubbles during

polymerization. [5] Ammonium persulfate and TEMED are added when the gel is ready to be polymerized. The separating or resolving gel is usually more basic and has a higher polyacrylamide

content than the loading gel.[6] 

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Gels are polymerized in a gel caster. First the separating gel is poured and allowed to polymerize. Next a thin layer of isopropanol is added, causing the top of the separating gel to form a

smooth surface. Next, the loading gel is poured and a c omb is placed to create the wells. After the loading gel is polymerized the comb can be removed and the gel is ready for electrophoresis.

[edit]Electrophoresis

First the anode and cathode buffers are prepared. The anode buffer usually contains Tris-Cl, distilled deionized water and is adjusted to a higher pH than the cathode buffer. The cathode buffer 

contains SDS, Tris, Tricine, and distilled deionized water.[7] [8] 

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The electrophoresis apparatus is set up with cathode buffer covering the gel in the negative electrode chamber, and anode buffer in the lower positive electrode chamber. Next, the denatured

sample proteins are added to the wells one end of the gel with a syringe or pipette. Finally, the apparatus is hooked up to a power source under appropriate running conditions to separate the

protein bands.

An electric field is applied across the gel, causing the negatively-charged proteins to migrate across the gel towards the positive (+) e lectrode (anode). Depending on their size, each protein will

move differently through the gel matrix: short proteins will more easily fit through the pores in the gel, while larger ones will have more difficulty (they encounter more resistance). After a set

amount of time (usually a fe w hours- though this depends on the voltage applied across the gel; higher voltages run faster but tend to produce somewhat poorer resolution), the proteins will

have differentially migrated based on their size; smaller proteins will have traveled farther down the gel, while larger o nes will have remained closer to the point of origin. Therefore, proteins

may be separated roughly according to size (and therefore, molecular weight), certain glycoproteins behave anomalously on SDS gels.

[edit]Staining

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Two SDS-PAGE-gels after a completed run

Following electrophoresis, the gel may be stained (most commonly with Coomassie Brilliant Blue R-250 or silver stain), allowing visualization of the separated proteins, or processed further 

(e.g. Western blot). After staining, different proteins will appear as distinct bands within the gel. It is common to run molecular weight size markers of known molecular weight in a separate lane

in the gel, i n order to ca librate the gel and determine the weight of unknown proteins by comparing the distance traveled relative to the marker. The gel is actually formed because the

acrylamide solution contains a small amount, generally about 1 part in 35 of bisacrylamide, which can form cross-links between two polyacrylamide molecules. The ratio of acrylamide to

bisacrylamide can be varied for special purposes. The acrylamide concentration of the gel can a lso be varied, generally in the range from 5% to 25%. Lower percentage gels are better for 

resolving very high molecular weight proteins, while much higher percentages are needed to resolve smaller proteins. Determining how much of the various solutions to mix together to make

gels of particular acrylamide concentration can be done on line 

Gel electrophoresis is usually the first choice as an assay of protein purity due to its reliability and ease. The presence of SDS and the denaturing step causes proteins to be separated solely

based on size. False negatives and positives are possible. A comigrating contaminant can appear as the same band as the desired protein. This comigration could also c ause a protein to run a t

a different position or to not be able to penetrate the gel. This is why it is important to stain the entire gel including the stacking section. Coomassie Brilliant Blue will also bind with less affinity to

glycoproteins and fibrous proteins, which interferes with quantification.

[edit]Chemical ingredients and their roles

Polyacrylamide ge l (PAG) had been known as a potential embedding medium for sectioning tissues as early as 1964. Two independent groups, Davis and Raymond, employed PAG in

electrophoresis in 1959.[9][10] It possesses several electrophoretically desirable features that make it a versatile medium. PAGE separates protein molecules according to both size and charge. It

is a s ynthetic gel, thermo-stable, transparent, strong, relatively chemically inert, can be prepared with a wide range of average pore sizes.[11] The pore size of a gel is determined by two factors,

the total amount of acrylamide present (%T) (T = Total acrylamide-bisacrylamide monomer concentration) and the amount of cross-linker (%C) (C = Crosslinker concentration). Pore size

decreases with increasing %T; with cross-linking, 5%C gives the smallest pore size. Any increase or decrease in %C increases the pore size, as pore size with respect to %C is a parabolic

function with vertex as 5%C. This appears to be because of nonhomogeneous bundling of strands in the gel.

This gel material can a lso withstand high voltage gradients, feasible for various staining and destaining procedures, and can be digested to extract separated fractions or dried

for autoradiography and permanent recording. DISC electrophoresis utilizes gels of different pore sizes.[12][13]The name DISC was derived from the discontinuities in the electrophoretic matrix

and coincidentally from the discoid shape of the separated zones of ions. There are t wo layers of gel, namely stacking or s pacer gel, and resolving or separating gel.

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Transmission-Electron Microscopic image of a polyacrylamide gel. A polyacrylamide gel is a labyrinth of tunnels, the pore size is determined by the total amount of monomer present (%T) and the amount of 

cross-linker (%C).

[edit]Stacking gel

The stacking gel is a large pore PAG (4%T). This gel is prepared withTris/HCl buffer pH 6.8 of about 2 pH units lower than that of electrophoresis buffer (Tris/Glycine). These conditions provide

an environment for Kohlrausch reactions determining molar conductivity, as a result, SDS-coated proteins are concentrated to several fold and a thin starting zone of the order of 19 m is

achieved in a few minutes. This gel is cast over the resolving gel. The height of the stacking gel region is a lways maintained more than double the height and the vo lume of the sample to be

applied. This is based on isotachophoresis.

[edit]Chemical ingredients

  Tris (tris (hydroxy methyl) aminomethane) (C4H11NO3; mW: 121.14). It has been used as a buffer because it is an innocuous substance to most proteins. Its pKa is 8.3 at 20 °C,

making it a very satisfactory buffer in the pH range from roughly 7 to 9.

  Glycine (Amino Acetic Acid) (C2H5NO2; mW: 75.07). Glycine has been used as the source of trailing ion or slow ion because its pKa is 9.69 and mobility of glycinate are such that the

effective mobility can be set at a value below that of the slowest known proteins of net negative charge in the pH range. The minimum pH of this range is approximately 8.0.

  Acrylamide (C3H5NO; mW: 71.08). It is a white crystalline powder. While dissolving in water, autopolymerizationof acrylamide takes place. It is a slow spontaneous process by which

acrylamide molecules join together by head on tail fashion. But in presence of free radicals generating system, acrylamide monomers are activated into a free-radical state. These

activated monomers polymerise quickly and form long chain polymers. This kind of reaction is known as Vinyl addition polymerisation. A solution of these polymer chains becomes

viscous but does not form a gel, because the chains simply slide over one another. Gel formation requires hooking various chains together. Acrylamide is a neurotoxin. It is also

essential to store acrylamide in a cool dark and dry place to reduce autopolymerisation and hydrolysis.

  Bisacrylamide (N,N'-Methylenebisacrylamide ) (C7H10N2O2; mW: 154.17). Bisacrylamide is the most frequently used cross linking agent for poly acrylamide gels. Chemically it is

thought of having two-acrylamide molecules coupled head to head at their non-reactive ends.

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  Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate (SDS) (C12H25NaO4S; mW: 288.38). SDS is the most common dissociating agent used to denature native proteins to individualpolypeptides. When a protein

mixture is heated to 100 °C in presence of SDS, the detergent wraps around the polypeptide backbone. It binds to polypeptides in a constant weight ratio of 1.4 g/g of polypeptide. In this

process, the intrinsic charges of polypeptides becomes negligible when co mpared to the negative charges contributed by SDS. Thus polypeptides after treatment becomes a rod like

structure possessing a uniform charge density, that is same net negative charge per unit length. Mobilities of these proteins will be a linear function of the logarithms of their molecular 

weights.

Without SDS, different proteins with si milar molecular weights would migrate differently due to differences in mass charge ratio, as each protein has an isoelectric point and

molecular weight particular to its primary structure. This is known as Native PAGE. Adding SDS solves this problem, as it binds to and unfolds the protein, giving a near uniform

negative charge along the length of the polypeptide.

  Ammonium persulfate (APS) (N2H8S2O8; mW: 228.2). APS is an initiator for gel formation.

  TEMED (N, N, N', N'-tetramethylethylenediamine) (C6H16N2; mW: 116.21). Chemical polymerisation of acrylamide gel is used for SDS-PAGE. It can be i nitiated by ammonium

persulfate and the quaternary amine, N,N,N',N'-tetramethylethylenediamine (TEMED). The rate of polymerisation and the properties of the resulting gel depends on the

concentration of APS and TEMED. Increasing the amount of APS and TEMED results in a decrease in the average polymer chain length, an increase in gel turbidity and a

decrease in gel elasticity. Decreasing the amount of initiators shows the reverse effect. The lowest catalyticconcentrations that will allow polymerisation in the optimal period of 

time should be used. APS and TEMED are used, approximately in equimolar concentrations in the range of 1 to 10 mM.

[edit]Chemicals for processing and visualization

The following chemicals are used for processing of the gel and the protein samples visualized in it:

  Bromophenol blue (BPB) (3',3",5',5" tetrabromophenolsulfonphthalein) (C19H10Br 4O5S; mW: 669.99). BPB is the universal marker dye. Proteins and nucleic acids are mostly

colourless. When they are subjected to electrophoresis, it is important to stop the run before they run off the gel. BPB is the most commonly employed tracking dye, because it

is viable in alkali and neutral pH, it is a small molecule, it is ionisable and it is negatively charged above pH 4.6 and hence moves towards the anode. Being a small molecule it

moves ahead of most proteins and nucleic acids. As it reaches the anodic end of the e lectrophoresis medium electrophoresis is stopped. It can bind with proteins weakly and

give blue colour.

  Glycerol (C3H8O3; mW: 92.09). It is a preservative and a weighing agent. Addition of glycerol (20-30 or 50%) is often recommended for the storage of enzymes. Glycerol

maintains the protein solution at very low temperature, without freezing. It also helps to weigh down the sample into the wells without being spread while loading.

  CoomassieBrilliant Blue R-250 (CBB)(C45H44N3NaO7S2; mW: 825.97). CBB is the most popular protein stain. It is an anionic dye, which binds with proteins non-specifically.

The structure of CBB is predominantly non-polar. So is usually used (0.025%) in methanolic solution (40%) and acetic acid (7%). Proteins in the gel are fixed by acetic acid

and simultaneously stained. The excess dye incorporated in the gel can be removed by destaining with t he same solution but without the dye. The proteins are detected as

blue bands on a c lear background. As SDS is also anionic, it may interfere with staining process. Therefore, large volume of staining solution is recommended, approximately

ten times the volume of the gel.

  n-Butanol (C4H10O; mW: 74.12). Water saturated butanol is used as an overlay solution on the resolving gel.

  Dithiothreitol (DTT; C4H10O2S2; mW: 154.25). DTT is a reducing agent used to disrupt disulfide bonds to e nsure the protein is fully denatured before loading on the gel; ensuring

the protein runs uniformly. Traditionally the toxic and less potent 2-mercaptoethanolwas used.

[edit]Reducing SDS-PAGE

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Besides the addition of SDS, proteins may optionally be briefly heated to near boiling i n the presence of a reducing agent, such as dithiothreitol (DTT) or traditionally2-

mercaptoethanol (beta-mercaptoethanol/BME), which further denatures the proteins by reducing disulfide linkages, thus overcoming some forms of tertiary protein folding, and

breaking up quaternary protein structure (oligomeric subunits). This is known as reducing SDS-PAGE, and is most commonly used. Non-reducing SDS-PAGE (no boiling and no

reducing agent) may be used when native structure is important in further analysis (e.g. enzyme activity, shown by the use of  zymograms). For 

example, quantitative preparative native continuous polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (QPNC-PAGE) is a new method for separating native metalloproteinsin complex biological

matrices.

[edit]Silver staining

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Silver stained SDS Polyacrylamide gels

In the 14th century the silver staining technique was developed for colouring the surface of glass. It has been used extensively for this purpose since the 16th century. The colour 

produced by the early silver stains ranged between light yellow and an orange-red. Camillo Golgi perfected the silver staining for the study of the nervous system. Golgi's

methodstains a limited number of cells at random in t heir entirety.

[14]

The exact chemical mechanism by which this happens is still largely unknown.

[15]

Silver staining was i ntroduced

by Kerenyi and Gallyas as a sensitive procedure to detect trace amounts of proteins in gels.[16] The technique has been extended to the study of other biological macromolecules that

have been separated in a variety of supports.[17] Classical Coomassie Brilliant Blue staining can usually detect a 50 ng protein band, Silver staining increases the sensitivity typically

50 times. Many variables can influence the colour intensity and every protein has its o wn staining characteristics; clean glassware, pure reagents and water of highest purity are the

key points to successful staining.[18] 

[edit]Buffer systems

Postulated migration of proteins in a Laemmli gel system A: Stacking gel, B: Resolving gel, o: sample application c: discontinuities in the buffer and electrophoretic matrix

Most protein separations are performed using a "discontinuous" buffer system that significantly enhances the sharpness of the bands within the gel. During e lectrophoresis in a

discontinuous gel system, an ion gradient is for med in the early stage of electrophoresis that causes all of the proteins to focus into a single sharp band. This occurs in a region of the

gel that has larger pores so that the gel matrix does not retard the migration during the focusing or "stacking" event. Negative ions from the buffer in t he tank then "outrun" the SDS-

covered protein "stack" and e liminate the ion gradient so that the proteins subsequently separate by the sieving action in the lower, "resolving" region of the gel.

Many people continue to use a tris-glycine or "Laemmli" buffering system that stacks at a pH of 6.8 and resolves at a pH of ~8.3-9.0. These pHs promotedisulfide bond formation

between cysteine residues in the proteins, especially when they are present at high concentrations because the pKa of cysteine ranges from 8-9 and because reducing agent present

in the loading buffer doesn't co-migrate with the proteins. Recent advances in buffering technology alleviate this problem by resolving the proteins at a pH well below the pKa of 

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cysteine (e.g., bis-tris, pH 6.5) and i nclude reducing agents (e.g. sodium bisulfite) that move into the gel ahead of the proteins to maintain a reducing environment. An additional

benefit of using buffers with lower pHs is that the acrylamide gel is more stable so the gels can be st ored for long periods of time before use.[19][20] 

[edit]SDS gradient gel electrophoresis of proteins

Migration of proteins in SDS gels of varying acrylamide concentrations (%T). The migration of nine proteins ranging from 94kDa to 14.4 kDa is shown. Stacking and unstacking occurs continuously in

the gel, for every protein at a different gel concentration. The dotted line indicates the discontinuity at t he Gly¯/Cl¯ moving boundary. Proteins between the fast leading electrolyte and the slow trai ling

electrolyte are not diluted by diffusion.

As voltage is applied, the a nions (and negatively charged sample molecules) migrate toward the positive electrode (anode) in the lower chamber, the leading ion is Cl̄ ( high mobility and high

concentration); glycinate is the trailing ion (low mobility and low concentration). SDS-protein particles do not migrate freely at t he border between the Cl¯ of the gel buffer and the Gly¯ of the

cathode buffer. Friedrich Kohlrausch found that Ohm's law also applies to dissolved electrolytes. Because of the voltage Because of the voltage drop between the Cl-

and Glycine-buffers, proteins are compressed (stacked) into micrometer thin layers. [21] The boundary moves through a pore

gradient and the protein stack gradually disperses due to an frictional resistance increase of the gel matrix. Stacking and

unstacking occurs continuously in the gradient gel, for every protein at a different position. For a complete protein unstacking

the polyacrylamide-gel concentration must exceed 16% T. The two-gel system of "Laemmli" is a simple gradient gel. The pH

discontinuity of the buffers is of no significance for the separation quality, and a "stacking-gel" with a different pH is not

needed.

[edit]