Protein Estimation
Dr. Kasturi Sarkar
Methods Used for Protein Estimation
Colorimetric assay
• Biuret Assay
• Folin-Ciocalteu (Lowry) Assay
• Bicinchoninic Acid (Smith) Assay
• Dye-Binding (Bradford) Assay
Ultraviolet Absorbance
Quantitative Determination of Proteins
• There is no completely satisfactory method to
  determine the concentration of protein in any
  given sample
• The choice of the method depends on the
 nature of the protein and the nature of the other
  components present in the protein sample
 desired speed
 accuracy and
 sensitivity of assay
Primary Protein Structure
Secondary Protein Structure
-helix
-sheet
Tertiary Protein Structure
Quaternary Protein Structure
                 Biuret Assay
Peptide Chains       Biuret Complexes ( purple color )
Procedure
 Sample conc.   Sample vol (ml)   Biuret reagent   O.D at
   (mg/ml)                             (ml)        545nm
    BSA
      1               1                 4
      2               1                 4
      4               1                 4
      6               1                 4
      8               1                 4
     10               1                 4
  Unknown             1                 4
    Blank          Water (1)            4
Advantages
Reproducible
Very few interfering agents
 (ammonium salts being one such agent )
Fewer deviations than with the Lowry or
 ultraviolet absorption methods
Disadvantages
Requires large amounts of protein (1-20mg)
Low sensitivity
Reaction with Biuret
Folin-Ciocalteu (Lowry) Assay
Reagents
• Analytical reagent is prepared by mixing 2 ml of
  (b) with 100 ml of (a)
(a) 50 ml of 2% sodium carbonate mixed with 50 ml of
  0.1 N NaOH solution
(b) 10 ml of 0.5% copper sulphate, 5H2O and 1%
  sodium potassium tartrate solution (stabilizes the
  Cu2+ in alkaline solution).
•     Folin - Ciocalteau reagent solution: this is a
    solution of sodium tungstate and sodium molybdate
    in phosphoric and hydrochloric acid.
Procedure
Sample    Sample      Alk.               Lowry                 O.D. at
 conc.    vol (ml)   CuSO4               reagent               660nm
(mg/ml)               (ml)   Incubatio     (ml)    Incubatio
 BSA                         n at room             n at room
                              temp for              temp for
  0.05      0.2        2      10 mins      0.2      30 mins
   0.1      0.2        2                   0.2
   0.2      0.2        2                   0.2
   0.4      0.2        2                   0.2
  0.6       0.2        2                   0.2
  0.8       0.2        2                   0.2
Unknown     0.2        2                   0.2
Advantages
• Sensitive over a wide range, 100 times
  more sensitive than Biuret assay and 10-
  20 times more sensitive than UV detection
• Can be performed at room temperature
Disadvantages
• Many substances (Strong acids,
  ammonium sulfate, reducing agents)
  interfere with the assay
• Takes a considerable amount of time to
  perform
• The assay is photosensitive, so illumination
  during the assay must be kept consistent
  for all samples
Bicinchoninic Acid ( BCA ) Assay
Procedure
 Sample conc.   Sample vol   BCA reagent   Incubation    O.D at 562 nm
   (mg/ml)        (ml)          (ml)       at 60oC for
    BSA                                    15 minutes
     0.05          0.1           2
      0.1          0.1           2
      0.2          0.1           2
      0.4          0.1           2
     0.6           0.1           2
Prepare the required amount of protein determination reagent
by adding 1 volume copper sulfate solution to 50 volumes of
bicinchoninic acid solution.
Advantages
Very sensitive and rapid at elevated
 temperatures
Compatible with many detergents
Working reagent is stable
Very little variation in response between
 different proteins
Broad linear working range
Disadvantages
The reaction does not go to completion
 when performed at room temperature
Interferes with a no. of molecules sp with
 reducing agents frequently used in protein
 purification
Dye-Binding or Bradford Assay
Reagents
• Bradford Reagent (5x)
  100 mg of Coomassie blue G250 in
  dissolved in 50 ml of 95% ethanol. The
  solution is then mixed with 100 ml of
  85% phosphoric acid and made up to
  200ml with distilled water. The reagent
  should be filtered through Whatman
  No. 1 filter paper and then stored in an
  amber bottle at room temperature. It is
  stable for several weeks.
Procedure
 Sample conc.   Sample volume   Bradford reagent   O.D. at 595nm
   (mg/ml)          (ml)              (ml)
    BSA
     0.05            0.5              0.5
     0.1             0.5              0.5
     0.2             0.5              0.5
     0.4             0.5              0.5
     0.6             0.5              0.5
     0.8             0.5              0.5
  Unknown            0.5              0.5
    Blank            0.5              0.5
Advantages
Fast, very sensitive and inexpensive
 method
Highly specific for protein
Compatible with a wide range of
 substances
Extinction co-efficient for the dye-protein
 complex is stable
Non-linear standard curve over wide
 ranges
Disadvantages
Response to different proteins can vary
 widely, choice of standard is very important
 CBBG primarily responds to arginine
 residues (eight times as much as the other
 residues). Hence for an arginine rich
 protein, a standard should be found that is
 arginine rich as well.
       Ultraviolet Absorbance
The absorbance of aromatic amino acids,
mainly tyrosine and tryptophan is measured at
280nm (O.D = cl)
and
the following equation is used to estimate the
    protein concentration
  [Protein] (mg/mL) = 1.55 x A280 – 0.76 x A260
 Procedure
Autozero spectrophotometer with the buffer
               ↓
Take the absorbance at 280 nm in a quartz
   cuvette
               ↓
Change wavelength to 260 nm and zero with
   water (or buffer)
               ↓
Take absorption at 260 nm in a quartz
   cuvette
Advantages
• Very fast and inexpensive method
• Useful for estimation of protein before using
  a more accurate method
• Sample can be recovered
Disadvantages
• It is the least sensitive of the methods
• Higher orders of protein structure, many other
  cellular components, and particularly nucleic acids,
  also may absorb UV light
• Highly susceptible to contamination by buffers,
  biological materials and salts
• Protein amino acid composition is extremely
  important, thus the choice of a standard is very
  difficult, especially for purified proteins
• Absorbance is heavily influenced by pH and ionic
  strength of the solution.
Points to be Remembered
 • Use of clean glasswares and cuvettes
 • Always warm up the spectrophotometer for 15-20
   minutes before using
 • Include a standard curve each time the assay is
   performed
 • Make sure your standard curve covers the
   absorbance range of the unknown sample with at
   least two points on either side
Summary
              Biuret        BCA          Lowry         Bradford   Spectrophotometric
              Assay         Assay        Assay         Assay      Assay
Accuracy      Qualitative   0.5 μg/ml-   0.01-         2-120g/ml Detection of known
linear upto   assay         1.5 mg/ml    1.0 mg/ml                proteins only since molar
              (1-20mg)                                            extinction coefficients are
                                                                  required
O.D at        540nm         562nm        660nm         595 nm       280nm
Interference Ammoniu        Reducing     Reducing      Detergents, Chromophores that
             m salts        agents       agents,       basic       absorb at 280nm
                                         strong        buffers,
                                         acids,        flavonoids
                                         detergents,
                                         Tris,
                                         potassium
                                         compds etc
Incubation    10 mins       30 mins      40 mins       5 mins       nil
time