SDS-PAGE has a number of uses, which include:
- Establishing protein size
- Protein identification
- Determining sample purity
- Identifying disulfide bonds
- Quantifying proteins
- Blotting applications
SDS-PAGE stands for sodium dodecyl (lauryl) sulfate-polyacrylamide
gel electrophoresis. The SDS portion is a detergent. You may recognize
it if you read the ingredients lists on your shampoo, soap, or toothpaste.
The purpose of the SDS detergent is to take the protein from its
native shape, which is basically a big glob, and open it up into
a linear piece. It's kind of like taking a wadded up ball of string
and untangling it into one straight, long piece. This will allow
it to run more efficiently down the gel and will get you better
results, since it's easier to compare two linear pieces of something
rather than two wads of the same thing.
In more scientific terms, it is an anionic detergent
that binds quantitatively to proteins, giving them linearity and
uniform charge, so that they can be separated solely on the basis
if their size. The SDS has a high negative charge that overwhelms
any charge the protein may have, imparting all proteins with a relatively
equal negative charge. The SDS has a hydrophobic tail that interacts
strongly with protein (polypeptide) chains. The number of SDS molecules
that bind to a protein is proportional to the number of amino acids
that make up the protein. Each SDS molecule contributes two negative
charges, overwhelming any charge the protein may have. SDS also
disrupts the forces that contribute to protein folding (tertiary
structure), ensuring that the protein is not only uniformly negatively
charged, but linear as well.
The polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis works in a similar fashion to an agarose gel, separating protein molecules according to their size. In electrophoresis, an
electric current is used to move the protein molecules across a polyacrylamide gel. The polyacrylamide gel is a cross-linked matrix that functions as a sort of sieve to help "catch" the molecules as they are transported
by the electric current. The polyacrylamide gel acts somewhat like a three-dimensional mesh or screen. The negatively charged protein molecules are pulled to the positive end by the current, but they encounter
resistance from this polyacrylamide mesh. The smaller molecules are able to navigate the mesh faster than the larger one, so they make it further down the gel than the larger molecules. This is how SDS-PAGE separates
different protein molecules according to their size.
Once an SDS-PAGE gel is run, you need to fix the proteins in the gel so they don't come out when you stain the gel. Acetic acid 25% in water is a good
fixative, as it keeps the proteins denatured. The gel is typically stained with Coomasie blue dye R250, and the fixative and dye can be prepared in the same solution using methanol as a solvent. The gel is then
destained and dried.