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- Joined: Sat Oct 20, 2007 4:09 pm
i know protiens can stay in acetonitrile for very long without causing any damage to their structure. but how long can proteins stay in acetone or even methanol?
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You are right in that the proteins are preserved for analysis by mass spec.mean proteins in gel slices can stay in acetonitrile without harm, to which these proteins are extracted from gel slices in preparation for mass spectrometry.
Back in the dim distant past, addition of acetone (at -20C) was a standard method of deproteinating plasma samples for bioanalytical extraction work.Ok.
How about in acetone? What does this do to proteins?
hi~ do you have any paper that supports this? I'm doing some research on membrane fouling, but cant seem to find any info regarding thisacetone and methanol will also precipitate your protein.
you can resuspend protein precipitated with acetone and it will, in most cases, be intact (not denatured).
you may also be able to renature proteins precipitated by methanol, but i haven't tried.
acetone has been known to precipitate (and, indeed, crystallize) proteins since at least 1926 when sumner reported the crystallization of urease from jack bean meal (Sumner, J. B., J. Biol. Chem, 69: 435 (1926)). sumner also found that he could crystallize urease from alcohol (Sumner, J. B., et al., J. Biol. Chem., 125: 37 (1938)).hi~ do you have any paper that supports this? I'm doing some research on membrane fouling, but cant seem to find any info regarding thisacetone and methanol will also precipitate your protein.
you can resuspend protein precipitated with acetone and it will, in most cases, be intact (not denatured).
you may also be able to renature proteins precipitated by methanol, but i haven't tried.
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