Research Article |
Open Access |
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The Optimized Conditions of Two Dimensional Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis
for Serum Proteomics |
Fengming Gong †, Shufang Liang †*, Chunmei He, Guobo Shen, Yuhuan Xu, Zhizhong Xu,
Zhenling Wang, Xiaohua Wu, Yuquan Wei |
State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy and Cancer Center, West China Hospital, West China Medical School, Sichuan
University, Chengdu, 610041, The People’s Republic of China. |
| *Corresponding author: |
Dr. Shufang Liang. State Key Laboratory of Biotherapy,
West China Hospital, Sichuan University, 1# Keyuan Road 4,
Gaopeng Street, Chengdu 610041, China,
Fax : +86 28 85164060,
E-mail : zizi2006@yahoo.cn |
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| †These authors contribute equally to this work |
| Received July 14, 2008; Accepted August 06, 2008; Published August 13, 2008 |
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Citation: Fengming G, Shufang L, Chunmei H, Guobo S, Yuhuan X, et al. (2008) The Optimized Conditions of Two Dimensional Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis
for Serum Proteomics. J Proteomics Bioinform 1: 250- 257. doi:10.4172/jpb.1000032 |
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Copyright: © 2008 Fengming G, et al. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution
License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and
source are credited. |
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Serum proteome analysis provides a potential promising approach in disease diagnosis and therapeutic monitoring.
However, the large dynamic range of proteins, high-abundant proteins, excess of salt and lipid in serum
makes the analysis very challenging. Therefore, it is imperative to improve the dissolution of proteins in twodimensional
gel electrophoresis (2-DE), and enhance the ability to analyze the proteome of serum under a wide
variety of physiological conditions. This study examined the effects of various combinations of depletion highabundant
protein, precipitated means, hot SDS treatment and IPG strips with different pH on 2-DE map for
mouse serum. Finally the removal of high-abundant proteins in serum by the ProteoExtractTM Albumin Removal
column, ethanol precipitation, the heating with 2.5% SDS and 2.3% DTT to denature sample at 95oC for 3 min,
and IEF on pH 4-7 IPG strips (17cm) with 100 μg depleted serum proteins are generally recommended for
serum proteome analysis on 2-DE by silver staining, which can effectively improve the resolution and intensity of
low-abundant proteins. The optimized conditions help to produce a better reference 2-DE gel of serum samples
for following identification potential novel disease markers. |
Keywords |
| Serum proteomics; Two-dimensional gel electrophoresis; High-abundant protein; Optimial condition |
Introduction |
Serum proteins are useful diagnostic tools and alteration
of the expression of some serum proteins is an early sign of
an altered physiology that may be indicative of disease ( Poon et al., 2001), therefore serum is usually a source for
biomarker discovery by proteomics analysis. Potential novel
disease markers are often present at low concentrations.
However, the large dynamic range of proteins in serum
makes the analysis very challenging because high-abundant
proteins, such as albumin, IgG, antitrypsin, etc, tend to mask
those of lower abundance on two-dimensional gel electrophoresis
(2-DE) ( Ahmed et al., 2003). There have developed
several depletion columns to remove of a few highabundant
proteins in serum, which can increase the sample
loading capacity and improve the detection sensitivity of lowabundant
proteins ( Bjöhall et al., 2005). In addition, many
factors including sample preparation method, pH value of
IPG stripe, staining approach, etc can affect protein separation
and identification on 2-DE. 2-DE has major advantages
in discovery of the overall alternations of specific proteins
expression from serum sample
( Anderson et al., 1977; Omenn, 2004) , and the comparison of protein expression
between normal and abnormal states of serum is widely
applied to clinical and biomedical research in many
reports ( Judith et al., 2007; John et al., 2007; Bijon et
al., 2007; Baukjede et al., 2008; Zhao et al., 2007; Feng et al., 2005). |
In order to improve the separation of serum samples
prior to comparative analysis for disease marker identification, we optimized 2-DE conditions for serum proteomics
from sample preparation to deletion of high-abundant proteins
and IPG stripes with different pH, etc several factors.
The optimized conditions could substantially improve the
solubility and resolution of the protein mixture derived from
serum on 2-DE, which holds promise to accelerate the discovery
of novel serum protein biomarkers. |
Materials and Methods |
Serum Sample Collection |
|
Mouse blood serum and human serum(except hemolysis)
were respectively collected from the BALB/c mice and
healthy offers with their informed consent , and clotted for
2 h at room temperature( Jose et al., 2008). The clotted
material was removed by centrifugation at 3000 rpm for 15
min. The concentration of the serum protein was determined
using a protein quantitation kit (Bio-Rad, USA), by bovine
gamma globulin as the standard. The protein samples were
aliquoted and stored at -80°C without any treatment until
further assayed. |
Protein Preparation for IEF |
|
The serum samples were mixed with ice-cold ethanol or
acetone in 1:4 v/v ratios and precipitated at -20°C overnight.
The precipitated proteins were then centrifuged at
18000 g for 10 min, and air-dried pellets were dissolved in
20ul of a buffer containing 2.5% SDS and 2.3% DTT, denatured
at 95oC for 3 min(Joo et al, 2003). The concentration
of the processed serum protein was determined using
a Protein Quantitation Kit (Bio-Rad, USA). The serum
proteins were suspended in sample buffer (7 mol/L urea,
4% CHAPS, 60 mmol/L DTT, 2% BioLyte 3-10, BioRad)
for the first dimensional isoelectric focusing (IEF) analysis
on 7-cm, pH3-10 IPG strips. |
Depletion of High-Abundant Proteins |
|
In order to remove the main high-abundant proteins
from serum, the ProteoExtractTM Albumin Removal column
(ProteoExtractTM Albumin Removal Kit; Calbiochem,
San Diego, CA) was used to treat mouse serum. The orginal
40 ul serum sample was processed with one removal column
for each time, and the depletion procedure was performed
at room temperature according to manufacturer’s
instructions. The depleted serum samples were precipitated
with 4 times of ice-cold ethanol as above, and same
amount of original and depleted serum was performed 2-
DE in parallel. |
IEF on IPG Strips with Different pH Value |
| In the first dimension, proteins were separated by IEF
with precast IPG strips (nonlinear gradient pH3-10 or pH
4–7, 17 cm, BioRad). Proteins were diluted in the lysis buffer
(7 mol/L urea, 4% CHAPS, 60 mmol/L DTT, 2% BioLyte
3-10 or 4–7; BioRad) to obtain a total volume of 350ul per
strip. Focused IPG strips were rehydration at 50 V for 12 h.
IEF was performed at 20°C with a constant power (50uA/
IPG-strip) at 250 V for 30 min, linear; 1000 V for 1 h, rapid;
linear ramping to 10000 V for 5 h; and finally 10000 V for 6 h. |
As for the IEF on 7-cm IPG strip, the depleted serum
proteins were diluted in the lysis buffer (7 mol/L urea, 4%
CHAPS, 60 mmol/L DTT, 2% BioLyte 3-10 or 4–7; BioRad)
to obtain a total volume of 125ul per strip. Focused IPG
strips were rehydration at 50 V for 12 h. IEF was performed
at 20oC with a constant power (50uA/ IPG-strip) at
250 V for 30 min, linear; 1000 V for 1 h, rapid; linear ramping
to 4000 V for 3 h; and finally 4000 V for 4 h. |
SDS-PAGE |
| After IEF, IPG strips were equilibrated in 50mM Tris/
HCl ( pH 8.8), 6 M urea, 20% glycerol, 2% SDS and 10
mM DTT for 15 min, washed with 50 mM Tris/HCl (pH
8.8), 6 M urea, 20% glycerol, 2% SDS, and 200 mM
iodoacetamide for another 15 min. Then the IPG strip was
transferred to the top of 12% SDS-PAGE gel, and finally
embedded in low melting agarose subjected to SDS-PAGE
electrophoresis at constant current (20mA for initial 30min,
then 30 mA/ IPG-strip for the rest of time for 17-cm IPG
strip; 80V for initial 30min, then 120V/ IPG-strip for the
rest of time for 7-cm IPG strip). According to the previous
reported gel staining approaches of SDS-PAGE for serum
sample (Joo et al., 2003; Zhang et al.,2004) and our
experiments in advance (data not shown), the proteins were
stained with silver staining , which shows more sensitive for
detection the low-abundant proteins than staining with colloidal
Coomassie brilliant blue. Therefore, proteins were
stained with silver staining after separation on SDS-PAGE. |
Silver Staining |
| The silver staining for SDS-PAGE gels was performed
as following. Gels were fixed in 45% ethanol and 5% acetic
acid for 2 h, washed with deionized water for 20 min twice,
and then incubated in the sensitization solution containing
0.02% sodium thiosulfate for 2 min. After washing with
water for 5 min for 3 times, gels were stained in a solution
containing 0.1 % silver nitrate for 30 min at 4 °C. Protein spots were developed in a solution with 2% (w/v) sodium
carbonate and 0.04% formaldehyde until spots were clearly
visible. Then 1% acetic acid was applied to halt development
and stained gels underwent three 5-min washes in
water. |
Image Analysis |
|
The images were scanned using the Bio-Rad GS-800
scanner under white lights (400-750nm). Gel image was
processed and features were detected with PDQuest software
(Version 6.1, Bio-Rad).The computer program
PDQuest identified protein spots from the digitalized images
of the gel, and the 2-D PAGE resolved proteins were
located and quantified automatically. Each serum sample
was repeated three times and variability between the experiments
was assessed on three different gels. The data
was analyzed by comparision the reproducibility of the position
and quantity of protein spots between the two repeated
2-DE gels for one same sample (Pánek, et al., 1999), by
which the 2-DE map was determined to be reproducible
when more than 80% matching was achieved among gels
(Blomberg, et al.,1995). |
Results |
Hot SDS Treatment can Improve Protein Separation |
|
In order to desalt and remove lipid in the serum, the hot
SDS method was used to enhance the solubilization of serum
as following: the air-dried of serum by ethanol precipitation
were dissolved in 20ul of a buffer containing 2.5%
SDS and 2.3% DTT, denatured at 95oC for 3 min. And
finally 200 ug total proteins was diluted to 125 ul with a
sample rehydration buffer to run IEF. As a result, we can
obviously observe that more spots were detected on the 2-
DE (7-cm, pH3-10 nonliear IPG) via hot SDS treatment
than that not using this method. However, the concertration
of the SDS in the protein samples should be limited under
0.25%, w/v ratio, due to negative charges of SDS may affect
the PI of sample. |
|
Figure 1:The 2-DE image of serum proteins prepared by hot SDS method.(A)¡¡Unprocessed by hot SDS method, and (B) processed by hot SDS method. The IEF was performed on 7-cm IPG strips (3-10 NL), loading with 200ug of total
mouse serum proteins.
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Precipitation Optimization |
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Because the salts, nucleic acids and lipids in serum could
interfere with the 2-DE, precipitation is generally employed
to concentrate and selectively separate proteins in the sample
from the contaminating species. We compared the effects
of two different precipitation solvent(Jiang et al., 2004),
respectively ethanol and acetone. Serum was mixed with
ice-cold ethanol or acetone at 1:4 v/v ratios and precipitated
at -20°C for overnight .The precipitated samples were then centrifuged at 18000 g for 30 min, the supernatant was removed
and the pellet was air dried. The pellet was suspended
in 500ul of sample buffer to run 2-DE. As a result,
more protein dots with middle and low molecular weights
appeared on the 2-DE map by ethanol precipitation than
that by acetone precipitation (Figure 2). |
|
Figure 2: The 2-DE images of serum proteins respectively prepared by precipitation with acetone (A) and ethanol (B).
The IEF was performed on 7-cm IPG strips (3-10 NL), loading with 200ug of total mouse serum proteins.
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| Effect of the Removal of High-Abundant Proteins |
| Serum albumin can constitute 50-70% of the total serum
proteins and IgG is up to10-25%, the presence of these highabundant
proteins can mask other low-abundant proteins
and cause loss of resolution in 2-DE. More less-abundant
proteins from the depleted serum samples were separated
and visible on 2-DE , and the aggregation of high-abundant
proteins was greatly reduced , which resulted in the appearance
of new protein spots compared to the crude serum
smples (Figure 3).Therefore it is important to deplete
high-abundant proteins, which is about 80% of total serum
proteins, by using ProteoExtract TM Albumin /IgG remove
column, as an essential first step in the characterization of
serum so that 3-4 times more enriched sample can be loaded
on 2-DE. |
|
Figure 3: The serum 2-DE patterns with depletion of high-abundant proteins. (A) Unprocessed mouse serum sample, and
(B) the mouse serum after removal of high-abundant proteins. The IEF was performed on 17-cm IPG strips (pH3-10
NL), loading with 100ug of total serum proteins.
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Efficiency of IPG Strips with Different pH Range |
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In order to enhance resolution of serum low-abundant
proteins, we compared with two kinds of IPG strips, respectively
pH 3-10 (NL) and pH4-7. The protein spots mainly
appeared on the acid part of 2-DE gel with pH 3-10 (NL)
IPG strip, in contrast, the whole protein pattern was relatively
uniform and more protein spots were separated on 2-
DE gel with pH 4-7 IPG strip (Figure 4). This was due to
the majority of the serum molecular and PI gathered between
45-80kD and 4.5-6, therefore, using narrow range
immobilized pH gradients with a large sample loading volume
allows an efficient resolubilization of polypeptides after
the first dimension (Bjellqvist et al., 1993). |
|
Figure 4: The influence of IPG strips with different pH range on serum 2-DE. (A) a 17-cm, pH3-10 NL strip and (B) a 17- cm, pH 4-7 IPG strips, loading with 100ug of depleted mouse serum proteins respectively.
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| The Optimized Conditions of 2-DE for Serum
Sample |
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Based on our above experiment results, the conditions
including the removal of high-abundant proteins using
ProteoExtractTM Albumin /IgG remove kit, then depleted
serum sample precipitated by ethanol, following hot SDS
treatment and denatured at 95°C for 3 min, and finally IEF
manipulation on pH 4-7 IPG strips, were the optimized parameters
to run 2-DE for serum samples. Under these
conditons, 100 μg depleted mouse serum samples was loaded
on the 17-cm IPG strip with pH4-7 and sufficiently separated on 2-DE (Figure 5A). Similarly, the 2-DE map was
clearly with 40μg depleted serum proteins loading on a 7-
cm IPG strip(pH4-7) (Figure 5B). |
|
Figure5: The best optimized 2-DE conditions for serum samples. (A) a 17-cm, pH 4-7 strip loading with 100ug of
depleted mouse serum proteins; and (B) a 7-cm, pH 4-7 strip loading with 40ug of depleted mouse serum proteins; (C)a
7-cm, pH 4-7 strip loading with 40ug of depleted human serum proteins.
|
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| Each experiment was performed triplicate to ensure the
accuracy of analyses. The maps were analyzed by PDQuest
software Version 6.1 (Bio-Rad). The 2-DE gel pattern was
similar to each other, and almost 90% matching on spot position
and quantity was achieved. As for the 3 repeated 17-
cm gels with pH4-7 for mouse depleted serum analysis, a
subset of 316 spots was matched in all gels out of an average
of 342 resolved proteins. In other words, the spots matching
percentage was about 92±3%. By using only the spots
that matched across all gels, the mean standard deviation of
20.6% was calculated among the three gel replicates. An
average deviation of 0.72mm (x-position) and 0.45 mm (yposition)
were obtained for all three gels. Similarly, we applied
this optimized conditions to human serum and obtained
a good 2-DE map repeatedly (Figure 5C). These comprehensive
optimized 2-DE conditions for serum proteomic
analysis provided a better foundation later to find and idenidentify
more candidate changed proteins between two serum
samples. |
Discussion |
| Appropriate sample preparation is essential for obtaining
good results in 2-DE. The removal of high-abundant
proteins from serum is a necessary step in biomarker discovery
studies. There have several commercially available
depletion columns for removal of high-abundant protein in
serum, which have different depletion efficiency and binding
specificity (Ahmed et al., 2003). In addition, Valerie et
al. used the Gradiflow BF400 as a fractionation tool to deplete
highly abundant albumin from human plasma (Valerie et al., 2005). However, pre-separation for serum samples
is required more advanced methods. Our goal was to find
the most efficient method of sample analysis for serum
proteomics. |
Because serum albumin is a predominant protein in serum,
we used an albumin depletion strategy prior to serum
sample proteomic analysis. The albumin depletion approach we used is based on disposable (single-use) prepacked albumin-
specific binding resin columns (ProteoExtractTM Albumin
Removal Kit; Calbiochem, San Diego, CA), which
was validated to be the best albumin/IgG removal kit with
good efficiency, specificity and reproducibility (Ahmed
et al., 2003; Björhall et al., 2005 ). According to the datasheet
provided by the user protocol of ProteoExtractTM Albumin
Removal Kit, more than 80% and 70% of serum albumin
and IgG can be removed respectively from human and
mouse plasma, which was almost verified by our serum
sample manipulation (data not shown). Furthermore, this kit
was simple to manipulate. However, it was disposable for
single use and only small amounts of depleted proteins was
available each time. Our results showed that more lessabundant
proteins from the depleted mouse serum samples
were separated and detected on 2-DE. Similarly, other
prefractionation techniques including serum precipitation, hot
SDS treatment and IPG strips with pH4-7 can effectively
increase the resolution of low-abundant serum proteins.
These modified approachs are also applied for other serum
samples from other species including human beings, because
the main components of human serum are similar to that of
mouse serum. Therefore, the removal of high-abundant proteins
in serum, ethanol precipitation, the heating with 2.5%
SDS and 2.3% DTT to denature sample at 95oC for 3 min,
and IEF on pH 4-7 IPG strips are generally recommended
for serum proteome analysis on 2-DE. Overall, our study
provides comprehensive optimized conditions, and assists in
the following discovery and detection of low-abundant proteins
in serum by mass spectrometry that may prove to be
informative biomarkers |
Acknowledgements |
| This work was supported by the grants from the National
Key Basic Research Program of China
(2004CB518800), the National Natural Sciences Foundation
of China, the National 863 Projects and Sichuan Province
Funded Project (2008JY0033) . |
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