groEL Antibody [K3P10]

N° de catalogue F2972

Imprimer

Description biologique

Spécificité groEL Antibody [K3P10] détecte les niveaux endogènes de la protéine groEL totale.
Contexte GroEL est une chaperonne moléculaire hautement conservée, essentielle pour aider au bon repliement des protéines naissantes ou dénaturées par le stress chez les procaryotes tels qu'Escherichia coli. GroEL se compose de 14 sous-unités identiques agencées en deux anneaux heptamériques empilés formant un grand complexe cylindrique à double anneau avec une cavité centrale interne; chaque sous-unité contient trois domaines, apical, intermédiaire et équatorial, qui facilitent ensemble la liaison du substrat, l'hydrolyse de l'ATP et la communication inter-anneaux. Les domaines apicaux lient les substrats protéiques dépliés et la co-chaperonine GroES, qui agit comme un couvercle pour encapsuler les substrats dans la cavité centrale, créant un environnement protégé qui favorise un repliement correct. GroEL fonctionne via un cycle conformationnel dépendant de l'ATP où la liaison et l'hydrolyse de l'ATP induisent des mouvements de domaine qui régulent la liaison du substrat, l'encapsulation, le repliement et la libération, prévenant ainsi l'agrégation et favorisant les conformations natives. GroEL fait partie du système plus large de contrôle de la qualité des protéines, travaillant en étroite collaboration avec d'autres chaperonnes comme DnaK et DnaJ pour maintenir la protéostase cellulaire et permettre la survie pendant le stress tel que le choc thermique. Les perturbations de la fonction de GroEL peuvent entraîner des erreurs de repliement des protéines impliquées dans les maladies neurodégénératives.

Informations dutilisation

Application WB, IP Dilution
WB
1:1000
Réactivité Escherichia coli
Source Mouse Monoclonal Antibody MW 57 kDa
Tampon de stockage PBS, pH 7.2+50% Glycerol+0.05% BSA+0.01% NaN3
Stockage
(À partir de la date de réception)
-20°C (avoid freeze-thaw cycles), 2 years
WB
Experimental Protocol:
 
Sample preparation
1. Tissue: Lyse the tissue sample by adding an appropriate volume of ice-cold RIPA/NP-40 Lysis Buffer (containing Protease Inhibitor Cocktail),and homogenize the tissue at a low temperature.
2. Adherent cell: Aspirate the culture medium and wash the cells with ice-cold PBS twice. Lyse the cells by adding an appropriate volume of RIPA/NP-40 Lysis Buffer (containing Protease Inhibitor Cocktail) and put the sample on ice for 5 min.
3. Suspension cell: Transfer the culture medium to a pre-cooled centrifuge tube. Centrifuge and aspirate the supernatant. Wash the cells with ice-cold PBS twice. Lyse the cells by adding an appropriate volume of RIPA/NP-40 Lysis Buffer (containing Protease Inhibitor Cocktail) and put the sample on ice for 5 min.
4. Place the lysate into a pre-cooled microcentrifuge tube. Centrifuge at 4°C for 15 min. Collect the supernatant;
5. Remove a small volume of lysate to determine the protein concentration;
6. Combine the lysate with protein loading buffer. Boil 20 µL sample under 95-100°C for 5 min. Centrifuge for 5 min after cool down on ice.
 
Electrophoretic separation
1. According to the concentration of extracted protein, load appropriate amount of protein sample and marker onto SDS-PAGE gels for electrophoresis. Recommended separating gel (lower gel) concentration: 10%. Reference Table for Selecting SDS-PAGE Separation Gel Concentrations
2. Power up 80V for 30 minutes. Then the power supply is adjusted (110 V~150 V), the Marker is observed, and the electrophoresis can be stopped when the indicator band of the predyed protein Marker where the protein is located is properly separated. (Note that the current should not be too large when electrophoresis, too large current (more than 150 mA) will cause the temperature to rise, affecting the result of running glue. If high currents cannot be avoided, an ice bath can be used to cool the bath.)
 
Transfer membrane
1. Take out the converter, soak the clip and consumables in the pre-cooled converter;
2. Activate PVDF membrane with methanol for 1 min and rinse with transfer buffer;
3. Install it in the order of "black edge of clip - sponge - filter paper - filter paper - glue -PVDF membrane - filter paper - filter paper - sponge - white edge of clip";
4. The protein was electrotransferred to PVDF membrane. ( 0.45 µm PVDF membrane is recommended ) Reference Table for Selecting PVDF Membrane Pore Size Specifications
Recommended conditions for wet transfer: 200 mA, 120 min.
( Note that the transfer conditions can be adjusted according to the protein size. For high-molecular-weight proteins, a higher current and longer transfer time are recommended. However, ensure that the transfer tank remains at a low temperature to prevent gel melting.)
 
Block
1. After electrotransfer, wash the film with TBST at room temperature for 5 minutes;
2. Incubate the film in the blocking solution for 1 hour at room temperature;
3. Wash the film with TBST for 3 times, 5 minutes each time.
 
Antibody incubation
1. Use 5% skim milk powder to prepare the primary antibody working liquid (recommended dilution ratio for primary antibody 1:1000), gently shake and incubate with the film at 4°C overnight;
2. Wash the film with TBST 3 times, 5 minutes each time;
3. Add the secondary antibody to the blocking solution and incubate with the film gently at room temperature for 1 hour;
4. After incubation, wash the film with TBST 3 times for 5 minutes each time.
 
Antibody staining
1. Add the prepared ECL luminescent substrate (or select other color developing substrate according to the second antibody) and mix evenly;
2. Incubate with the film for 1 minute, remove excess substrate (keep the film moist), wrap with plastic film, and expose in the imaging system.

Références

  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16849107/
  • https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34521893/

Données dapplication

WB

Validé par Selleck

  • F2972-wb
    Lane 1: groEL recombinant E. coli protein, Lane 2: Hsp60 recombinant human protein (negative control), Lane 3: E. coli lysate