Protein Concentration Determination Using Dyes and Beer-Lambert Law
Date
Authors
Rodger, Alison
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
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Abstract
Synonyms
Absorbance of light; Transmission of light
Definition
Although proteins have different percentages of different amino acids, each residue has an amide bond linking it to the next residue in the chain. A number of concentration determination methods have been developed that involve derivatizing the amides with a dye and spectroscopically determining the concentration of the derivatives (Noble and Bailey 2009). The three methods mentioned below all rely on a standard of known concentration to enable a calibration curve to be plotted. The calibration is not necessarily linear and ideally is the same protein of known purity since the dye binding efficiency varies from protein to protein. Other reagents in the sample such as buffer salts and detergents may also interfere with either the chemistry or the spectroscopy of the dyes.
Basic Characteristics
The methods for three commonly used assays are outlined below.
Biuret Method
The biuret method is simple and reasonably specific as...
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Source
Type
Book Title
Encyclopedia of Biophysics
Entity type
Publication