Effect of the hydrolysis method on the determination of the amino acid composition of proteins
1998; Elsevier BV; Volume: 795; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/s0021-9673(97)00983-7
ISSN1873-3778
AutoresMartin J. Weiss, Michael Manneberg, Jean‐François Juranville, Hans‐Werner Lahm, Michael Fountoulakis,
Tópico(s)RNA and protein synthesis mechanisms
ResumoFast and reproducible separation and determination of amino acids serves the economical and reliable characterization and quantification of peptides and proteins as well as the identification of proteins by amino acid composition analysis on a large-scale. A prerequisite of a successful compositional analysis is a complete hydrolysis of the peptides and proteins and a quantitative recovery of the residues in the hydrolyzate. We investigated the effect of different acid-hydrolysis methods on the compositional analysis of known proteins in solution and after blotting onto polyvinylidene difluoride membranes and worked out the conditions for the processing of large numbers of samples. The reliability of each method was studied by introducing the analysis data into the AACompIdent software and deducing the protein identification scores. All acid-hydrolysis methods delivered reliable analysis data. The most accurate data were provided by conventional, thermal hydrolysis of proteins in solution in the presence of methanesulfonic acid, closely followed by hydrolysis with hydrochloric acid and microwave radiation-dependent hydrolysis with hydrochloric or methanesulfonic acid, respectively. For blotted proteins, conventional hydrolysis delivered more accurate analysis data in comparison with the microwave radiation-induced hydrolysis. The extraction of the residues from the membrane hydrolyzate was a critical step for unambiguous protein identification. Microwave radiation-induced hydrolysis was responsible for a higher degree of racemization of the residues.
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