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Separation of Membrane Proteins Solubilized with a Nondenaturing Detergent and a High Salt Concentration by Hydroxyapatite High-Performance Liquid Chromatography

✍ Scribed by T. Ichimura; N. Ikuta; Y. Uda; T. Horigome; S. Omata


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Weight
533 KB
Volume
224
Category
Article
ISSN
0003-2697

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✦ Synopsis


Ceramic hydroxyapatite high-performance liquid chromatography with a solvent containing high concentrations of salts was used for the separation of membrane proteins solubilized under nondenaturing and high salt conditions. The chromatographic conditions were optimized using sodium cholate as the detergent. By this method, most membrane proteins, prepared from rat liver rough microsomes, were effectively resolved from each other with a protein recovery of more than (\mathbf{9 0 %}). The method also allowed the single-step purification of the ribosome-binding protein, p34, from a microsomal membrane protein fraction. The good resolution with this method should be applicable to the isolation and characterization of a variety of membrane proteins on the analytical and semipreparative scales. With only the substitution of sodium cholate with other nondenaturing detergents, this method may also be applicable to the purification of membrane proteins requiring such nondenaturing detergents with retention of their biological activities. 1995 Academic Press, Inc.


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