Updates of the In¿Gel Digestion Method for Protein Analysis by Mass Spectrometry
Fecha
2018Resumen
The in-gel digestion of proteins for analysis by liquid chromatograph mass
spectrometry has been used since the early 1990s. Although several
improvements have contributed to increasing the quality of the data obtained,
many recent publications still use sub-optimal approaches. Updates of the
in-gel digestion protocol has been presented in the study. It has been shown
that alternative reducing, alkylating agent reactions, and tryptic digestion
buffers increase peptide and protein identification and reduce incubation
times. The results indicate that a simultaneous and short, high temperature
reduction and alkylation reaction using Tris(2-carboxyethyl)phosphine
hydrochloride and chloroacetamide with a subsequent gel wash improve
protein identification and sequence coverage, and diminish peptide side
reactions. Additionally, use of 4-(2-hydroxyethyl)piperazine-1-ethanesulfonic
acid buffer allows a significant reduction in the digestion time improving
trypsin performance and increasing the peptide recovery. The updates of the
in-gel digestion protocol described here are efficient and offer flexibility to be
incorporated in any proteomic laboratory.