| Literature DB >> 27482532 |
Abstract
In-gel digestion coupled with mass spectrometric analysis (GeLC-MS/MS) is a cornerstone for protein identification and characterization. Here I review this versatile approach which combines classical and modern biochemistry strategies and allows for targeted and proteome-wide analyses. Starting with any protein sample, reduced and alkylated proteins are precipitated prior to fractionation by SDS-PAGE. Proteins are in-gel digested and the resulting peptides are extracted and desalted for downstream LC-MS/MS analysis. GeLC-MS/MS leverages the advantages of both traditional SDS-PAGE visualization and protein fractionation with the robust protein and post-translational modification identification and quantitation capabilities of state-of-the-art mass spectrometry-based technology. As such, this strategy allows for the visible assessment of protein amount and quality, prior to analysis via virtually any mass spectrometry platform. Moreover, gel extracted peptides may be derived from any sample type-e.g., from cell culture, tissue, body fluid, or recombinantly-expressed protein-and are fully compatible with isobaric tagging. GeLC-MS/MS is an invaluable technique for proteomic analyses.Entities:
Keywords: GeLC-MS/MS; biomarkers; mass spectrometry; proteomics
Year: 2016 PMID: 27482532 PMCID: PMC4959781 DOI: 10.14440/jbm.2016.106
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Methods ISSN: 2326-9901
Detection limits for most common protein stains.
| Stain | Detection limit (ng per gel band) | References |
| Coomassie | 30–100 | [ |
| Colloidal Coomassie | 1–16 | [ |
| Silver stain | 0.5–1 | [ |
| DiGE (Cy2/Cy3/Cy5) | 0.025 | [ |
Troubleshooting table.
| Problem | Possible solution |
| Stained protein on gel displays edge effects within gel lanes or band smearing. | This could be a result of several problems. Adding 1 × sample buffer to any unused wells may often solve this problem. The problem may also stem from additives in the sample buffer, so one should minimize or decrease salts, detergents, and solvents during sample preparation and in sample buffers. |
| Sample is loaded onto gel, but sample floats out of the well. | Add 10% glycerol to make sample denser than the surrounding buffer. |
| Gel does not destain quickly prior to cutting. | The addition of one or two crumpled KimWipe tissue will bind residual Coomassie dye, and accelerate the destaining process. |
| Gel slice remains blue following several washes. | Note that more frequent changes of Destaining Buffer may be necessary to sufficiently destain intensely-stained gel pieces. If gel pieces become dehydrated (white and rigid), destaining becomes less efficient. Alternating Destaining Buffer with a five-minute wash in organic solvent-free Digestion Buffer (100 mM EPPS pH 8.5) may aid the destaining process. |
| Following digestion, gel slices are dry. | Ensure that the gel pieces are covered with sufficient buffer to account for evaporation so that the gels do not dry overnight. |