| Literature DB >> 26880869 |
Katharina Gimpl1, Jessica Klement1, Sandro Keller1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In vitro investigations of membrane proteins usually depend on detergents for protein solubilisation and stabilisation. The amount of detergent bound to a membrane protein is relevant to successful experiment design and data analysis but is often unknown. Triple-detection size-exclusion chromatography enables simultaneous separation of protein/detergent complexes and protein-free detergent micelles and determination of their molar masses in a straightforward and absolute manner. Size-exclusion chromatography is used to separate different species, while ultraviolet absorbance, static light scattering, and refractive index measurements allow molar mass determination of protein and detergent components.Entities:
Keywords: Absolute mass determination; Detergent micelles; Membrane proteins; Multiple detection; Static light scattering
Year: 2016 PMID: 26880869 PMCID: PMC4753644 DOI: 10.1186/s12575-015-0031-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Proced Online ISSN: 1480-9222 Impact factor: 3.244
Fig. 1Schematic setup of triple-detection SEC. A high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) system is used to provide constant flow and an SEC column to separate different species. UV absorbance and RI detectors monitor changes in protein and detergent concentrations, while an LS detector follows changes in scattering intensity at multiple scattering angles. Data acquisition is controlled by a software package
Fig. 2a Elution profile and b molar masses of OmpLA/LDAO complexes. a Excess RI values and voltages of UV and LS detectors are depicted as functions of elution volume. PDCs and protein-free detergent micelles elute as two separate peaks at 9 mL and 11 mL, respectively. Peaks at 3 mL and 7 mL are so-called “system peaks” caused by injected air or shedding of the SEC column. b Excess Rayleigh ratios at a scattering angle of 90° and derived molar masses of OmpLA, LDAO, and the OmpLA/LDAO PDC are plotted versus elution volume. 3 mg/mL OmpLA in 50 mM Tris, 100 mM KCl, 2 mM EDTA, pH 8.3, c det,buffer = 4 mM, c det,sample = 5 mM, flow rate 0.4 mL/min, room temperature (RT)
Fig. 3SEC as monitored by static light scattering of different alkyl maltosides in the (a) absence and (b) presence of 6 M urea. Excess Rayleigh ratios at 90° and molar masses of DDM, UM, DM, and NM are depicted as functions of elution volume. 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, c det,sample = CMC8 M urea + 5 mM, c det,buffer = CMCbuffer + 2 mM, flow rate 0.4 mL/min, RT
Fig. 4SEC as monitored by static light scattering of Mistic solubilised in different alkyl maltosides in the (a) absence and (b) presence of 6 M urea. a Excess Rayleigh ratios at 90° for Mistic solubilised in DDM, UM, DM, and NM are depicted as functions of elution volume. In the absence of urea, the traces of NM and DM show two peaks, indicating separation of PDCs and protein-free micelles. Single peaks for UM and DDM indicate co-elution of PDCs and micelles. b At 6 M urea, for all detergents except DDM, unfolded protein and detergent micelles are separated. The elution volume of the protein is at ~9.3 mL for all measurements, whereas the elution volumes of detergent micelles change according to their size. For DDM, unfolded detergent-free Mistic and DDM micelles co-elute [11]. Additional peaks in the SLS signal at ~8.5 mL in the DDM and UM traces are so-called “system peaks”; these peaks are typically caused by injected air or shedding of the SEC column and do not show up in UV and RI signals. 1 mg/mL Mistic, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, c det,sample = CMC8 M urea + 5 mM, c det,buffer = CMCbuffer + 2 mM, flow rate 0.4 mL/min, RT
Overview of elution volumes and molar masses of Mistic/alkyl maltoside complexes under native and denaturing conditions
| 0 M urea | ||||
| Sample | Elution volume (mL) |
|
|
|
| Mistic + DDM | 9.8 | 53 | 13 | 40 |
| Mistic + UM | 10.0 | 47 | 13 | 34 |
| Mistic + DM | 10.3 | 33 | 13 | 20 |
| 10.8 | 38 | 0 | 38 | |
| Mistic + NM | 10.5 | 25 | 13 | 12 |
| 11.5 | 28 | 0 | 28 | |
| 6 M urea | ||||
| Sample | Elution volume (mL) |
|
|
|
| Mistic + DDM | 9.3 | 0 | 13* | 30* |
| Mistic + UM | 9.3 | 12 | 12 | 0 |
| 10.0 | 23 | 0 | 23 | |
| Mistic + DM | 9.3 | 13 | 13 | 0 |
| 10.8 | 19 | 0 | 19 | |
| Mistic + NM | 9.3 | 13 | 13 | 0 |
| 13.5 | 9 | 0 | 9 | |
*Values derived from linear combination of independent Mistic and DDM measurements rather than global analysis
Fig. 5SEC as monitored by UV absorbance, refractive index, and light scattering of Mistic solubilised in DDM or NM and of protein-free DDM micelles in the presence of 6 M urea. UV absorbance and RI values as well as the voltage of the LS detector are depicted as functions of elution volume. a 6.08 mM DDM without protein gives rise to a single peak at ~9.3 mL in both RI and LS signals but shows no UV absorbance. b Mistic solubilised in 29.6 mM NM produces two peaks, namely, one at 9.3 mL representing unfolded protein and a second one at ~13 mL reflecting protein-free detergent micelles. c Mistic solubilised in 6.08 mM DDM reveals only a single peak at ~9.3 mL in all three detectors. 1 mg/mL Mistic, 50 mM Tris, pH 7.4, 50 mM NaCl, c det,sample = CMC8 M urea + 5 mM, c det,buffer = CMCbuffer + 2 mM, flow rate 0.4 mL/min, RT
Method settings in ChemStation for system calibration
| Pump Parameter | |
| Flow | 0.5 mL/min |
| Stop Time | 60 min |
| Solvent A | 100 % |
| Pressure Limits Max | system pressure + 18 MPa |
| Injector | |
| Standard Injection | Enable |
| Injection Volume | 100 μL |
| DAD Parameter (UV diode array) | |
| Signals Store | Enable 280 nm |
| Stop Time | As pump |
| Peakwidth | 1 s |
| Slit | 4 nm |
Fig. 6Scheme of control software. The main features of ChemStation and ASTRA and the menus for controlling detectors, data acquisition, and data analysis are depicted together with the interfaces between the two programs
Sequence table settings in ChemStation for system calibration
| Location | Position of your sample in the sampling tray |
|---|---|
| Method | SEC_SLS_Calibration |
| Injection (number of replicates of the sample that must be run) | 1 |
| Sample volume | 100 μL |
ASTRA settings for PDC measurements
| Generic pump | |
| Flow Rate (mL/min) | 0.4 |
| Solvent | |
| Reference Refractive Index | 1.335 (i.e., the refractive index determined in step 37|) |
| Injector | |
| Injected Volume (mL) | 0.05 |
| Sample | |
| d | 0.1946 |
| UV Extinction Coefficient (mL/(g cm)) | 2668 |
Settings for LS analysis in ASTRA
| Model | Zimm |
| Fit Degree | 1 |
| d | 0.1946 |
| UV Extinction (mL/(g cm)) | 2668 |
| Modifier d | 0.1592 |
| Modifier UV Extinction (mL/(g cm)) | 0 |
(*) dn/dc value of the protein; here determined with the SEDFIT software tool [41]
Troubleshooting advice
| Step | Problem | Possible Reason | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | The refractive index increases even after long equilibration time. | High denaturant concentrations can cause detergent precipitation. | Dilute sample to lower denaturant concentration and perform experiment at this concentration. |
| Denaturant precipitates. | |||
| 2B | No plateau is reached. | Loop volume is too small; hence, the applied volume does not completely fill the measurement chamber. | Install larger sample loop. |
| 2B | Change between plateaus is not pronounced enough for reliable discrimination. | Flow rate of syringe pump is too high. | Reduce flow rate to (0.1–0.2) mL/min. |
| 2B | Baselines are unstable. | Disconnection of syringe causes pressure changes and injection of air bubbles. | Wait for a few minutes until the baseline is stable again. |
| 5, 21, 38, 50 | RI baseline is unstable. | Too much gas dissolved in solvent. | Make sure your buffer is degassed before using it in triple-detection SEC. |
| The flow rate has changed. | Use the same flow rate during system equilibration and measurement to allow the baseline to stabilise. | ||
| 19–21, 50 | Measurement cannot be started. | Sample tray is not placed correctly. Connection between software and LS or RI detector is lost. | Remove tray and make sure it is put back in place correctly. Close ASTRA, restart the detectors, and subsequently restart ASTRA. |
| 21, 50 | No data acquisition in ASTRA. | Method in ChemStation was started before the sample set in ASTRA was started. | Stop method in ChemStation, check that enough sample is left, and start ASTRA data acquisition before restarting the method run in ChemStation. |
| 28 | Reference detector is not the one with the broadest signal. | Wrong reference detector chosen. Inappropriate peak selection. | Make sure to choose the detector with the broadest signal. This is normally the last detector in line and should be the RI detector. Make sure you set the peak boundaries from halfway up the peak to the point where all detector signals have returned to baseline. |
| 55 | Baseline cuts peaks to be analysed. | High denaturant or salt concentrations cause baseline instabilities. | Set baselines manually for each detector individually, such that the flanks of peaks of interest essentially reach baseline level without being cut or shifted upwards. |
| 59 | Systematic deviation from linearity of one of the LS detectors. | Detectors are not normalised correctly. | Check detector normalisation values. If necessary, repeat normalisation. If the sample analysed reveals a unimodal particle size distribution, normalisation can be done using the actual measurement according to the procedure described in step 33|. |
| 59 | Data points cannot be fitted with a linear fit. | Scattering particles are large (i.e., >50 nm), and, thus, the Zimm plot is significantly curved. | Select a different fit model in the peak section. |
| 59 | Molar mass plot is bent upwards or downwards within the analysed region (smiley or anti-smiley effect). | Band-broadening correction is incorrect. | Check settings for instrument and mixing terms; if necessary, repeat band-broadening correction for current solvent system. |
| 60 | The results obtained are far from expected or reasonable values. | Incomplete separation of different species. | Install a different SEC column that is able to separate the species of interest. Try manual, more complex analysis algorithms that are able to distinguish contributions from different species (see |
| 60, 63 | Analysis is not possible. Molar masses are displayed as N/A in the final report. | Baseline correction, peak selection, or constants needed for analysis were not adapted to the system being analysed. | Check if baseline settings and peak selection are correct and if the saved constants correspond to the system you are analysing. |