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Sample Preparation Guidelines for Sequence Analysis


General sample handling

To minimize protein losses from adsorption to walls of tubes, use polypropylene tubes or siliconized glass tubes. Avoid polystyrene (clear plastic) and untreated glass.

Use freshly prepared, high purity reagents and water. Contaminants from buffers, detergents, urea, guanidine can prevent a good sequencing result.

Free acrylamide can react with the amino groups on your protein during polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis which reduces the chance for good sequencing data. Use completely polymerized gels by either using precasted gels (InVitrogen) or by pouring the separation gel the day before you plan on running the gel.

Always run standard proteins or markers and a blank on the same gel. Protein quantity can be estimated by running the appropriate molecular weight markers in differing concentrations on the same gel as the sample.

Protein Purity and Concentration

The purity of the protein should be 85% or higher. Contaminating peptides or proteins interfere with the Edman chemistry and contribute to a higher noise level. The lower the amount of protein, the higher the purity is required.

Proteins submitted for N-terminal sequencing

  • Sample amount required 10 pmol minimum (ready to sequence), remember only 50% will yield signal.

Mass to Moles Conversion Table

Mol. Wt.

1 nmol

100 pmol

10 pmol

1 pmol

100 fmol

100 kD

100 µg

10 µg

1 mg

100 ng

10 ng

80 kD

80 µg

8 µg

800 ng

80 ng

8 ng

60 kD

60 µg

6 µg

600 ng

60 ng

6 ng

50 kD

50 µg

5 µg

500 ng

50 ng

5 ng

40 kD

40 µg

4 µg

400 ng

40 ng

4 ng

20 kD

20 µg

2 µg

200 ng

20 ng

2 ng

10 kD

10 µg

1 µg

100 ng

10 ng

1 ng

  • Proteins blotted on PVDF This is the ideal preparation for sequencing (see section below).
  • Proteins in solution Submit sample volumes between 100 and 1000 microliters.
    Please be very explicit on last step in sample preparation. All buffers, solvent, detergents and their concentrations must be specified. If the sample has been stored for a period of months indicate also.

Electroblotting on PVDF membranes

Please determine how much protein you have on an analytical gel before you blot. Obtain standards of known concentrations from the facility. Then consult with us to see if you have enough protein before you blot you protein to PVDF. Count on a loss of 50-75% during blotting. You will need 10 pmols of protein on the PVDF.

IMPORTANT!! Use PVDF membranes only. Nitrocellulose ruins the sequencer.

Pre-Wet PVDF with 100% methanol for 30 sec followed by equilibration in transfer buffer for 5-15 min.

  • Common transfer buffers
CAPS: 10 mM CAPS, 10% methanol, pH 11.0. Degas before use.
Tris-Glycine: 25 mM Tris, 192 mM Glycine, 20% methanol, pH 8.3.
  • CAPS buffer is preferred for sequence analysis (no glycine contamination). If Tris-Glycine is used the membrane needs to be washed thoroughly with dd- water following transfer and staining.

    User bulletin on electroblotting and references are available.

Proteins submitted for Internal Sequencing Analysis

Procedure: In-solution (purified proteins) or in-gel or digest, analysis of the peptide mixture by mass spectrometry (peptide mass fingerprinting) or isolation of peptides by capillary HPLC and subsequent sequence- and mass spectral analysis.

Purified proteins: Must be submitted in volatile buffers or solvents (trifluoroacetic acid, formic acid, acetic acid, ammonium bicarbonate, acetonitrile or triethylamine). In case the protein is not soluble in one of these volatile buffers, concentrate or precipitate the protein and run it on SDS-PAGE .

Non-pure proteins should be run on SDS-PAGE, individual bands will be excised for in-gel digestion.

  • In-gel digestion: Polymerize the gel overnight and use 5.0% acetic acid/20% methanol in the Coomassie Blue G-250 staining solution. Destain the gel with 30% methanol; the gel does not have to be completely destained.

Important: maximize the protein/gel ratio: concentrate your proteins, run it in as few lanes as possible without sacrificing resolution.


Peptide Synthesis and Purification | Protein Sequence Analysis 
Mass Spectrometry | 2D Gel Electrophoresis


Protein Sciences Facility
Peter Yau, Ph.D - Director
315 Noyes Laboratory, 505 South Mathews Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801
Phone: (217) 333-4695     FAX: (217) 244-1142      
Email: proteinsciences@uiuc.edu

Last edited: 04 Nov 2004