Purification of Antibody Light Chains by Metal Affinity and Protein L Chromatography
Immobilized metal affinity chromatography (IMAC), introduced in 1975 (1 ), relies on the formation of coordinate bonds between metal ions immobilized on a suitable support and electron donor groups in proteins. A polyhistidine tag (five or six His residues) placed at either the C- or N-terminus of a recombinant protein can form a stable chelate with immobilized transition metals. This allows fractionation of the target protein to 90–95% purity levels in a single chromatographic step (2 –4 ). Metals like Cu2+ and Ni2+ bind surface-accessible His residues selectively. The high affinity of polyhistidine tags for commercially available metal resins (K d 10?13 M or more) allows the use of stringent conditions to remove loosely bound proteins, while retaining the recombinant protein bound to the immobilized metal.
- 大鼠VGF神經生長因子誘導蛋白(VGF)酶聯免疫分析
- 分子生物學技術在免疫學診斷中的應用
- 細菌的生物化學試驗
- 鼠疫桿菌(yersinia pestis)
- Ⅰ型變態反應(Ⅰtypeallergy)
- 雜交瘤細胞的保存與復蘇
- Proteomic Analysis of Protein Complexes in Toll-Like Receptor Biology
- Preparation?Of?Peptide-KLH?Conjugates?For?Immunization
- Murine Model of Allergic Lung Inflammation
- Enzyme-Antienzyme Method for Immunohistochemistry