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Always wear gloves and work in the hood to reduce keratin contamination.
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Excise gel bands or spots.
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It is highly recommended that a positive and negative control be conducted in parallel to all analyses. The positive control can be a marker or known protein while the negative control should be a blank region of the gel.
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Wash twice with 50µL of 18 Mohm water for approx. 15 minutes.
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Wash sufficient times with 50 µL of a 50%/50% solution of acetonitrile/50mM ammonium bicarbonate to remove all stain from gel plug. Each wash should be approximately 30 minutes in length. Two washes should be sufficient for moderately intensity bands.
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Wash and dehydrate with 50 µl (spot) to 100 µL (band) of acetonitrile until gel plugs turn opaque, generally 20 minutes.
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Decant all liquid from opaque gel plugs
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Dry sample plugs in vacuum centrifuge.
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Prepare trypsin solution while drying samples using sequence grade, modified bovine or porcine Trypsin (Roche/Promega). Prepare stock trypsin solution by dissolving 20 to 25 µg in 200µL 1mM HCl or 1% Acetic acid so that final concentration is between 100ng/mL to 125 ng/µL.
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Prepare working trypsin solution by diluting stock solution 1 to 10 with 25 mM ammonium bicarbonate such that final concentration = 10 to 12.5 ng/µL. Note the pH difference in stock solution (~2.9) versus working solution (pH~8.0). Trypsin activity is pH dependent. At low pH trypsin has low activity and can be stored for approximately 2 weeks. Trypsin working solutions must be used shortly after increasing pH to 8, ie 2 hrs. If not autolytic digestion products are observed at higher levels than desirable.
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Rehydrate dried gel plug/bands in approximately 20 µL trypsin for 20 minutes. This allows the trypsin to infuse into the gel plug for "in-gel" digestion.
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Remove excess trypsin solution with pipette. (some use a 25mM ammonium bicarbonate washed to aid in excess trypsin removal but we suggest that you only wash if autolytic trypsin peaks are problematic)
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Add 10 to 20 µL of 25mM ammonium bicarbonate to sample vial to ensure proper hydration during digestion at elevated temperatures.
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Digest at 37°C for 4 to 6 hrs. Overnight digestions are possible but yield higher levels of autolytic trypsin products which may decrease sensitivity for low level protein digests.
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Stop digestion by adding 25 µL of 10% formic acid (note pH change) allow to stand for 15 minutes.
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Recover supernate – one can sample this solution directly for peptide mass mapping or continue extracting additional peptides. We suggest further extraction.
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Extract twice with of 50%/50% acetonitrile/50mM ammonium bicarbonate for 15 minutes to recover additional peptides. Pool with supernate from step 12.
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Extract with 25 µL to 50 µL of 100% acetonitrile. Pool with supernate from step 12.
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Concentrate to 5 µL or dryness in vacuum centrifuge. Concentration to dryness is more convenient but may result in some loss of peptides which will not resolubilize.
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Dried peptides can be stored at -20°C or -80°C for long periods of time (1yr).
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Immediately prior to mass analysis dissolve dried peptides in 50%/50% acetonitrile/1% formic acid. Alternatively 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid can be used but TFA can reduce ionization efficiency through ion pair formation.