[RASMB] Sv and Se for V
Christine Ebel
christine.ebel at ibs.fr
Mon Jun 9 01:31:53 PDT 2008
Dear Colleague,
I am sending a reference where I used sedimentation velocity in H2O and D2O to evaluate partial specific volume and discuss the errors:
Gohon et al. Analytical Biochemistry 334 (2004) 318–334
Please, if you want the pdf file, send me an E mail.
Using this method, the precision is high when partial specific volume values are close to 1, (the solvent density), i.e. for detergent, lipids...
The precision is low of for vbar values far from 1, i.e. for nucleic acids, charged polysaccharide...
The method can be used to heterogeneous solutions.
The exchange of Hydrogen to deuterium; and in the case of polyelectrolyte ion dissociation, have to be considered in the calculation of partial specific volume.
They affect in a small or large extent the value of partial specific volume depending on the value of the partial specific volume.
All the best
Christine
Christine EBEL
Institut de Biologie Structurale CEA-CNRS-UJF
41 rue Jules Horowitz, F-38027 Grenoble France
Tel (33) (0) 4 38 78 95 70; Fax (33) (0) 4 38 78 54 94
christine.ebel at ibs.fr
<http://www.ibs.fr/content/ibs_eng/presentation/lab/lbm/ebel.htm> http://www.ibs.fr/content/ibs_eng/presentation/lab/lbm/ebel.htm
-----Message d'origine-----
De : rasmb-bounces at rasmb.bbri.org [mailto:rasmb-bounces at rasmb.bbri.org] De la part de Ariel Lustig
Envoyé : dimanche 8 juin 2008 14:03
À : rasmb server1 forum
Objet : [RASMB] Sv and Se for V
Dear Colleauges,
I wanted to leave the discussion (see Walter Staffords last e-mail 7 June 08) for the Newcastle AUC Symposium in September 08, but it developed already now, so I shall give here the abstract of the my
contribution about this theme and a new approach to solve it.:
The use of an elder mode to determine the density of vesicles by S0 versus ρ is a good approach that can be used also to determine protein/RNA or protein/DNA complexes.
First of all we have to bear in our mind that the molecular masses achieved from centrifugation, based on the buoyant term (the partial specific volume, V the particle), here in this discussed case Vpot.DNA or Vprot.RNA. Usually we invest a big effort on sophisticated methods to calculate molecular weights Mw, but the lack of precise V values is like a weak link of a chain. In such mentioned case we are able to calculate the V from the protein amino acids and nucleic acids but the exact ratio of both components is usually unknown.
The classical density determination by pycnometry even with digital precise instruments needs the knowledge of the total particle concentration of the solution that can be only estimated.
The use of S.J. Edelstein and H.K.Schachman’s mode, (JBC 196, vol.247 , 306-317) to make parallel runs in H2O and D2O buffer as mentioned also in the RSC published book >> Analytical Ultracentrifugation, Techniques and Methods<< page 197, edited by D. Scott et al, can be employed only if the samples are pure, monodispersed and reveal with sedimentation equilibrium SE straight slopes and single Mw’s. The reality in case of biological samples is, that the slopes tends to self-association , nonideality or both effects and even show partly aggregation, so that the deviated lines from them the V is calculated are not single and straight.
Using the SEGAL computer program when the slopes of 2 parts are calculated, it is easy to realize this discrepancy.
Using the S0 relative versus ρ mode developed by C.H: Huang and J Charlton (JBC
1971 Vol. 216) that was used to study the density of vesicles, it is possible to apply it also for high molecular complexes. The advantage in this case is, that even the sample sediments with a boundary that contains partly a faster or a slower component (as it happens often with biological samples) it can be used to achieve S°0 (at a D2O –H2O buffer density where S’ comes at rest) that represents the V of the particle. Important is to use the whole series of S0 relative at the same particle concentration to avoid S’ differences that stem from concentration dependence of S’.
All our measurements were done with absorption optics using the XLA at the same wavelength WL since the used samples do not show a distinct WL maximum at 260 nm or 280 nm.
...............yours......ariel
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