Publication | Closed Access
Routine identification of proteins from sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS‐PAGE) gels or polyvinyl difluoride membranes using matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization‐time of flight‐mass spectrometry (MALDI‐TOF‐MS)
184
Citations
27
References
1998
Year
Low Abundance ProteinsDifluoride MembranesFlight‐mass SpectrometryBiological Mass SpectrometryMolecular BiologyProtein AnalysisAnalytical UltracentrifugationPvdf-bound ProteinsProtein PurificationBioanalysisAnalytical ChemistryAnalytical BiotechnologyProteomicsProtein ChemistryBiochemistryRoutine IdentificationBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesMass SpectrometryResource LaboratoryProtein Mass SpectrometryNative Mass SpectrometryProtein EngineeringMedicine
As the resource laboratory for Rockefeller University our emphasis continues to be on methodology development for the routine analysis of low abundance proteins isolated from native sources. In the past ten years, gel electrophoresis of proteins has become the method of choice for the preparation of microgram and submicrogram quantities of protein for primary structural characterization, and over 95% of the samples submitted for protein identification are either in a gel or bound to polyvinyl difluoride membranes (PVDF). As such, we employ multiple microanalytical approaches encompassing Edman sequence degradation, amino acid and matrix assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight (MALDI-TOF) mass spectrometric analysis to provide an integrated protein characterization of such samples. Here we describe the two major services we employ when providing protein identification from in-gel or PVDF-bound proteins.
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