富含半胱氨酸蛋白质在凝胶电泳过程中的氧化

C. Achilli, A. Ciana, G. Minetti
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In the gel, they all migrate towards the anode, with an electrophoretic mobility correlated with their mass. Discontinuous SDS-PAGE was then introduced, by Leonard Ornstein and Baruch J. Davis in 1964 [2,3], as a more efficient variant of SDSPAGE. It consists of a stacking gel polymerized on top of the resolving gel. The stacking gel, by its more acidic pH and lower polyacrylamide concentration, allows proteins to stack into a thin band before entering into the resolving gel, where they separate as better resolved bands. Concerning the visualization of proteins in gel, two main strategies have taken hold: the non-specific protein staining with dyes such as coomassie brilliant blue [4], or the specific detection of a given protein by Western blotting [5]. In addition, an SDS-PAGE variant, later to be named zymography, was introduced for in-gel visualization of proteins endowed with hydrolytic activity, especially proteases. This method is based on incorporation into the polyacrylamide gel of a specific substrate for the protease under investigation. After electrophoretic separation, the gel is incubated in a suitable buffer to ensure that the proteases possibly present in the original sample acquire again their enzymatic activity and digest the substrate in situ. The gel is then stained, for instance with coomassie blue, and the sites of proteolysis appear as white bands on a blue background [6]. SDS-PAGE, as a method for separating proteins according to their mass, has been further improved by Ulrich K. Laemmli in 1970 [7]. In the new protocol the protein samples are denatured with SDS in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol, a reducing agent that cleaves any disulfide bond, whether native or artificially induced, between cysteine residues in proteins. The compound also prevents subsequent oxidation of cysteines and maintains them in the reduced state. One year later, Grant Fairbanks et al. further perfected the protocol for analysis of erythrocyte membrane proteins, by replacing 2-mercaptoethanol with dithiothreitol, a dimercaptan reducing agent more powerful than 2-mercaptoethanol itself [8]. It is common conviction that during electrophoretic separation under the standard conditions described above, proteins are sufficiently well preserved from oxidation, but this turns out to be not true. In fact, the electrophoretic gel is a strong pro-oxidant environment, due to the unavoidable presence of residual traces of ammonium persulfate that is used during the preparation of the gel for catalyzing the polymerization of acrylamide. Furthermore, at the pH value of the electrophoretic gels, both 2-mercaptoethanol and dithiothreitol are in an uncharged state. Therefore they do not migrate together with the proteins and cannot perform their protective function during the electrophoretic run. Generally, this phenomenon occurs during the stacking phase of SDS-PAGE [9], when proteins are highly concentrated into a very small volume. The consequence is the formation of anomalous high-molecular weight protein aggregates that remain at the interface between the stacking and resolving gels. These artifacts could lead to a misinterpretation of the experimental results. To prevent their onset, the protection of thiol groups by a variety of alkylating agents can be adopted [10]. Alternatively, a simpler method is the treatment of the sample with thioglycolic acid. This compound, owing to its low pKa, is in the anionic state at the pH value of the stacking and resolving gels, and can move towards the anode during electrophoresis. Moreover, the thioglycolate ion is of low molecular weight and migrates more rapidly than all proteins, removing the residual ammonium persulfate before it can react with the proteins themselves [11]. The rate of oxidation depends on the accessibility to oxidants of cysteine residues within the protein, the phenomenon being favored for proteins with high cysteine content. It has been clearly demonstrated, for the human chemokine IP-10, that the elevated propensity to cross-linking mediated by cysteine oxidation during SDS-PAGE can be counteracted by preventive alkylation of cysteines [9]. More recently, evidence for in-gel oxidation has been found also for two different mammalian β-defensins. However, this has not been proven with satisfactory experimental tests [12,13]. 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Concerning the visualization of proteins in gel, two main strategies have taken hold: the non-specific protein staining with dyes such as coomassie brilliant blue [4], or the specific detection of a given protein by Western blotting [5]. In addition, an SDS-PAGE variant, later to be named zymography, was introduced for in-gel visualization of proteins endowed with hydrolytic activity, especially proteases. This method is based on incorporation into the polyacrylamide gel of a specific substrate for the protease under investigation. After electrophoretic separation, the gel is incubated in a suitable buffer to ensure that the proteases possibly present in the original sample acquire again their enzymatic activity and digest the substrate in situ. The gel is then stained, for instance with coomassie blue, and the sites of proteolysis appear as white bands on a blue background [6]. SDS-PAGE, as a method for separating proteins according to their mass, has been further improved by Ulrich K. Laemmli in 1970 [7]. In the new protocol the protein samples are denatured with SDS in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol, a reducing agent that cleaves any disulfide bond, whether native or artificially induced, between cysteine residues in proteins. The compound also prevents subsequent oxidation of cysteines and maintains them in the reduced state. One year later, Grant Fairbanks et al. further perfected the protocol for analysis of erythrocyte membrane proteins, by replacing 2-mercaptoethanol with dithiothreitol, a dimercaptan reducing agent more powerful than 2-mercaptoethanol itself [8]. It is common conviction that during electrophoretic separation under the standard conditions described above, proteins are sufficiently well preserved from oxidation, but this turns out to be not true. In fact, the electrophoretic gel is a strong pro-oxidant environment, due to the unavoidable presence of residual traces of ammonium persulfate that is used during the preparation of the gel for catalyzing the polymerization of acrylamide. Furthermore, at the pH value of the electrophoretic gels, both 2-mercaptoethanol and dithiothreitol are in an uncharged state. Therefore they do not migrate together with the proteins and cannot perform their protective function during the electrophoretic run. Generally, this phenomenon occurs during the stacking phase of SDS-PAGE [9], when proteins are highly concentrated into a very small volume. The consequence is the formation of anomalous high-molecular weight protein aggregates that remain at the interface between the stacking and resolving gels. These artifacts could lead to a misinterpretation of the experimental results. To prevent their onset, the protection of thiol groups by a variety of alkylating agents can be adopted [10]. Alternatively, a simpler method is the treatment of the sample with thioglycolic acid. This compound, owing to its low pKa, is in the anionic state at the pH value of the stacking and resolving gels, and can move towards the anode during electrophoresis. Moreover, the thioglycolate ion is of low molecular weight and migrates more rapidly than all proteins, removing the residual ammonium persulfate before it can react with the proteins themselves [11]. The rate of oxidation depends on the accessibility to oxidants of cysteine residues within the protein, the phenomenon being favored for proteins with high cysteine content. It has been clearly demonstrated, for the human chemokine IP-10, that the elevated propensity to cross-linking mediated by cysteine oxidation during SDS-PAGE can be counteracted by preventive alkylation of cysteines [9]. More recently, evidence for in-gel oxidation has been found also for two different mammalian β-defensins. 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引用次数: 6

摘要

蛋白质的第一次电泳分析是由Arne Tiselius于1937年进行的[1],他因这一重要贡献于1948年获得诺贝尔化学奖。这项基础分析技术多年来不断完善,对生物化学、微生物学、免疫学和分子生物学等学科的研究产生了决定性影响。目前,最常见的蛋白质电泳分离是基于十二烷基硫酸钠(SDS)对蛋白质的预防性变性。这种两亲性洗涤剂以一种经过校准的比例与变性蛋白质结合,消除了它们原有的固有净电荷,并赋予它们均匀密度的负电荷。如此处理的蛋白质通过SDS中的聚丙烯酰胺凝胶电泳(SDS-PAGE)进行分离。在凝胶中,它们都向阳极迁移,电泳迁移率与它们的质量相关。随后,Leonard-Ornstein和BaruchJ.Davis于1964年引入了不连续SDS-PAGE[2,3],作为SDSPAGE的一种更有效的变体。它由聚合在分解凝胶顶部的堆叠凝胶组成。堆叠凝胶具有更高的酸性pH值和更低的聚丙烯酰胺浓度,使蛋白质在进入解析凝胶之前能够堆叠成一条细带,在那里它们作为更好的解析带分离。关于蛋白质在凝胶中的可视化,有两种主要策略:用考马斯亮蓝等染料进行非特异性蛋白质染色[4],或通过蛋白质印迹对给定蛋白质进行特异性检测[5]。此外,还引入了一种SDS-PAGE变体,后来被命名为酶谱法,用于具有水解活性的蛋白质,特别是蛋白酶的凝胶内可视化。这种方法是基于将特定底物掺入聚丙烯酰胺凝胶中,用于研究中的蛋白酶。电泳分离后,将凝胶在合适的缓冲液中孵育,以确保可能存在于原始样品中的蛋白酶再次获得其酶活性并原位消化底物。然后对凝胶进行染色,例如用考马斯蓝染色,蛋白水解位点在蓝色背景上显示为白色条带[6]。Ulrich K.Laemmli在1970年进一步改进了SDS-PAGE作为一种根据蛋白质质量分离蛋白质的方法[7]。在新方案中,蛋白质样品在2-巯基乙醇存在下用SDS变性,2-巯基乙醇是一种还原剂,可以切割蛋白质中半胱氨酸残基之间的任何二硫键,无论是天然的还是人工诱导的。该化合物还防止半胱氨酸的后续氧化并将它们保持在还原状态。一年后,Grant-Fairbanks等人进一步完善了红细胞膜蛋白分析方案,用二硫代苏糖醇取代了2-巯基乙醇,二巯基乙醇是一种比2-巯基乙醇本身更强大的二巯基还原剂[8]。人们普遍认为,在上述标准条件下的电泳分离过程中,蛋白质被充分良好地保护,不被氧化,但事实证明这不是真的。事实上,电泳凝胶是一种强的促氧化环境,这是由于在制备用于催化丙烯酰胺聚合的凝胶过程中不可避免地存在痕量过硫酸铵。此外,在电泳凝胶的pH值下,2-巯基乙醇和二硫代苏糖醇都处于不带电状态。因此,它们不会与蛋白质一起迁移,并且在电泳过程中不能发挥其保护功能。通常,这种现象发生在SDS-PAGE的堆积阶段[9],此时蛋白质被高度浓缩成非常小的体积。其结果是形成异常高分子量蛋白质聚集体,这些聚集体保留在堆积凝胶和分解凝胶之间的界面上。这些伪影可能会导致对实验结果的误解。为了防止其发作,可以采用各种烷基化剂对巯基的保护[10]。或者,一种更简单的方法是用巯基乙酸处理样品。由于其低pKa,该化合物在堆叠和分解凝胶的pH值下处于阴离子状态,并且可以在电泳过程中向阳极移动。此外,巯基乙酸根离子的分子量较低,迁移速度比所有蛋白质都快,在与蛋白质本身反应之前清除了残留的过硫酸铵[11]。氧化速率取决于蛋白质中半胱氨酸残基的氧化剂的可及性,这种现象对半胱氨酸含量高的蛋白质有利。已经清楚地证明,对于人类趋化因子IP-10,在SDS-PAGE过程中由半胱氨酸氧化介导的交联倾向的提高可以通过半胱氨酸的预防性烷基化来抵消[9]。
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Oxidation of cysteine-rich proteins during gel electrophoresis
The first electrophoretic analysis of proteins was performed in 1937 by Arne Tiselius [1], who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1948 for this important contribution. This fundamental analytical technique, which had a decisive impact on research in such disciplines as biochemistry, microbiology, immunology and molecular biology, has been perfected over the years. In present days, the most common type of electrophoretic separation of proteins is based on their preventive denaturation by sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS). This amphipathic detergent binds to the denatured proteins in a well calibrated ratio, abolishes their original intrinsic net charge and confers to them a negative charge of uniform density. Proteins so treated are separated by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis in SDS (SDS-PAGE). In the gel, they all migrate towards the anode, with an electrophoretic mobility correlated with their mass. Discontinuous SDS-PAGE was then introduced, by Leonard Ornstein and Baruch J. Davis in 1964 [2,3], as a more efficient variant of SDSPAGE. It consists of a stacking gel polymerized on top of the resolving gel. The stacking gel, by its more acidic pH and lower polyacrylamide concentration, allows proteins to stack into a thin band before entering into the resolving gel, where they separate as better resolved bands. Concerning the visualization of proteins in gel, two main strategies have taken hold: the non-specific protein staining with dyes such as coomassie brilliant blue [4], or the specific detection of a given protein by Western blotting [5]. In addition, an SDS-PAGE variant, later to be named zymography, was introduced for in-gel visualization of proteins endowed with hydrolytic activity, especially proteases. This method is based on incorporation into the polyacrylamide gel of a specific substrate for the protease under investigation. After electrophoretic separation, the gel is incubated in a suitable buffer to ensure that the proteases possibly present in the original sample acquire again their enzymatic activity and digest the substrate in situ. The gel is then stained, for instance with coomassie blue, and the sites of proteolysis appear as white bands on a blue background [6]. SDS-PAGE, as a method for separating proteins according to their mass, has been further improved by Ulrich K. Laemmli in 1970 [7]. In the new protocol the protein samples are denatured with SDS in the presence of 2-mercaptoethanol, a reducing agent that cleaves any disulfide bond, whether native or artificially induced, between cysteine residues in proteins. The compound also prevents subsequent oxidation of cysteines and maintains them in the reduced state. One year later, Grant Fairbanks et al. further perfected the protocol for analysis of erythrocyte membrane proteins, by replacing 2-mercaptoethanol with dithiothreitol, a dimercaptan reducing agent more powerful than 2-mercaptoethanol itself [8]. It is common conviction that during electrophoretic separation under the standard conditions described above, proteins are sufficiently well preserved from oxidation, but this turns out to be not true. In fact, the electrophoretic gel is a strong pro-oxidant environment, due to the unavoidable presence of residual traces of ammonium persulfate that is used during the preparation of the gel for catalyzing the polymerization of acrylamide. Furthermore, at the pH value of the electrophoretic gels, both 2-mercaptoethanol and dithiothreitol are in an uncharged state. Therefore they do not migrate together with the proteins and cannot perform their protective function during the electrophoretic run. Generally, this phenomenon occurs during the stacking phase of SDS-PAGE [9], when proteins are highly concentrated into a very small volume. The consequence is the formation of anomalous high-molecular weight protein aggregates that remain at the interface between the stacking and resolving gels. These artifacts could lead to a misinterpretation of the experimental results. To prevent their onset, the protection of thiol groups by a variety of alkylating agents can be adopted [10]. Alternatively, a simpler method is the treatment of the sample with thioglycolic acid. This compound, owing to its low pKa, is in the anionic state at the pH value of the stacking and resolving gels, and can move towards the anode during electrophoresis. Moreover, the thioglycolate ion is of low molecular weight and migrates more rapidly than all proteins, removing the residual ammonium persulfate before it can react with the proteins themselves [11]. The rate of oxidation depends on the accessibility to oxidants of cysteine residues within the protein, the phenomenon being favored for proteins with high cysteine content. It has been clearly demonstrated, for the human chemokine IP-10, that the elevated propensity to cross-linking mediated by cysteine oxidation during SDS-PAGE can be counteracted by preventive alkylation of cysteines [9]. More recently, evidence for in-gel oxidation has been found also for two different mammalian β-defensins. However, this has not been proven with satisfactory experimental tests [12,13]. The cysteine content of proteins is more variable than that of any
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