Waiting
로그인 처리 중...

Trial ends in Request Full Access Tell Your Colleague About Jove
Concept
JoVE Encyclopedia of Experiments
Encyclopedia of Experiments: Biological Techniques

JoVE 비디오를 활용하시려면 도서관을 통한 기관 구독이 필요합니다. 전체 비디오를 보시려면 로그인하거나 무료 트라이얼을 시작하세요.

 

Two-Dimensional Semi-Denaturing Agarose Gel Electrophoresis: A Technique to Separate Polymorphic Amyloids Fibers Based on Size Heterogeneity

Article

Transcript

Amyloid fibers are aggregates of misfolded proteins, which exhibit size heterogeneity. These fibers, being resistant to anionic detergents such as SDS, can be analyzed using two-dimensional semi-denaturing agarose gel electrophoresis.

To begin, take a pre-assembled, large pore-sized agarose gel that contains SDS. The high porosity allows the separation of intact fibers during the run. Overlay the gel with a running buffer containing SDS.

Load a cell lysate containing amyloid fibers into the gel. The presence of SDS and the absence of sample heating step creates semi-denaturing conditions where the detergent binds to highly resistant amyloids imparting a uniform negative charge to the intact fibers.

Run the gel in the first dimension at the appropriate voltage. The electric field causes the migration of negatively charged amyloids toward the positively charged anode.

During the run, smaller fibers migrate quickly compared to larger ones - forming a smear-like band pattern indicating size heterogeneity.

Upon completion, rotate the gel perpendicularly and run it in the second dimension. In this dimension, fibers move identically to the first run separating based on their sizes. This creates a diagonal smear as smaller fibers migrate faster than the larger ones.

The formation of the sharp diagonal band confirms an intact but heterogeneous amyloid fibrillar population.

Read Article

Get cutting-edge science videos from JoVE sent straight to your inbox every month.

Waiting X
Simple Hit Counter