[RASMB] Equilibrium runs with small peptides, high offset values
Joachim Behlke
behlke at mdc-berlin.de
Tue Dec 10 11:29:00 PST 2002
Von: Erin Matthews <erin.matthews at yale.edu>
Organisation: Yale University
An: rasmb at rasmb-email.bbri.org
Betreff: [RASMB] Equilibrium runs with small peptides, high offset values
Datum: Mon, 09 Dec 2002 19:34:43 -0500
Erin,
As Peter Schuck has recommended small peptides can be
analyzed well in sedimentation velocity experiments. Some years
ago we have studied succesfully angiotensin I and II with a
molecular mass of about 1.2 or 1.0 kDa using the whole boundary
sedimentation and fitting by an approximate solution of the Lamm
equation (see J. Behlke and O. Ristau: Biophys.Chem.70, 133-146
1998). The program Lamm which we have improved recently is
available on the RASMB site.
Best wishes.
Joachim Behlke
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> Thanks everyone for suggestions on my last question about data with
> negative slopes! I have yet another question on a different system.
>
> I did an equilbrium (absorbance optics) run on a water
> soluble peptide of 1290 Daltons. I had to spin at 60K rpm
> to get any reasonble data (data at lower speeds showed virtually no
> curvature). My problem now is this: using Nonlin, the best fit to the
> data gives a lower than expected sigma (.35 instead of .46 with both the
> offset and the second virial coefficent set to 0). There doesn't appear
> to be a higher order association. When I fix sigma to the 'known'
> value, the fit is poor, but when I then let the offset float I get a
> good fit, but the offset is .1332. Very high! I obviously can't do an
> overspeeding experiment to get an experimental measure of the depleted
> meniscus absorbance. As well, I imagine that the calculated partical
> specific volume (from Durchschlag and Zipper, 1994) could be inaccurate.
> Is there something more I can be doing to get an accurate fit? Which
> would be considered a more physically reasonble fit to the data--a fit
> using a lower than expected sigma value or a high offset?
>
> Thanks,
>
> Erin Matthews
> Graduate Student, Engelman Lab, Yale University
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