Separation Techniques of Protein
Separatory Techniques of Protein
- Precipitation is a reversible process.
- Types of techniques are-
- Salt fractionation
- Ultracentrifugation
- Electrophoresis
- Chromatography
- Ultra filtration
1. Salt fractionation–
- Salting In- 5% NaCl is used.
- Salting out- Excess Salt.
- Ammonium sulphate is most commonly used reagent for salting out in proteins.
- Sodium sulphate
2. Chromatography-
- Chromatography is based on the principle of partition of the protein.
- The most non-polar amino acids migrate the farthest, due to their greater solubility in the organic solvent.
a. Gel filtration chromatography or molecular sieving-
- Used for separation of molecules based on their size are Hydrophilic cross linked gels like agrose (Sepharose), dextran ( Sephadex)
b. Ion-exchange chromatography- Separation is made on the charge difference.
- The charged group commonly attached are
- diethylaminoethyl (DEAE) group- the negatively charged proteins associate with positively charged DEAE groups and replace chloride ions.
- carboxylmethyl (CM) cellulase chromatography- negatively charged or neutral proteins have no affinity for CM, move faster.
- High performance liquid chromatography (HPLC)-
- Affinity chromatography– based on the high affinity of specific proteins for specific chemical groups called ligand. Specific protein molecules bind to specific ligand.
- Hydrophobic interaction chromatography- hydrophobic ligand.
3. Electrophoresis- isoelectric net charge is zero and do not move.
- Electrophoresis is the most common method of protein separation in the clinical laboratory.
Types of electrophoresis are-
- Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) – on charge and molecular weight.
- Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)—PAGE- based on molecular size, molecular weight.
- Isoelectric focusing- on each protein has a different isoelectric point.
Exam Important
Types of techniques are-
- Salt fractionation
- Ultracentrifugation
- Electrophoresis
- Chromatography
- Ultra filtration
i. Salting In- 5% NaCl is used.
ii. Salting out- Excess Salt.
- Ammonium sulphate is most commonly used reagent for salting out in proteins.
- Chromatography- The most non-polar amino acids migrate the farthest, due to their greater solubility in the organic solvent.
- Gel filtration chromatography or molecular sieving- Used for separation of molecules based on their size are Hydrophilic cross linked gels like agrose (Sepharose), dextran ( Sephadex)
- Ion-exchange chromatography- Separation is made on the charge difference.
- The charged group commonly attached are
- diethylaminoethyl (DEAE) group- the negatively charged proteins associate with positively charged DEAE groups and replace chloride ions.
- carboxylmethyl (CM) cellulase chromatography- negatively charged or neutral proteins have no affinity for CM, move faster.
- Affinity chromatography- based on the high affinity of specific proteins for specific chemical groups called ligand. Specific protein molecules bind to specific ligand.
- Hydrophobic interaction chromatography- hydrophobic ligand.
- Electrophoresis- isoelectric net charge is zero and do not move.
- Electrophoresis is the most common method of protein separation in the clinical laboratory.
- Types of electrophoresis are-
- Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (PAGE) – on charge and molecular weight.
- Sodium dodecyl sulphate (SDS)—PAGE- based on molecular size, molecular weight.
- Isoelectric focusing- on each protein has a different isoelectric point.
Don’t Forget to Solve all the previous Year Question asked on Separation Techniques of Protein



