Detection of phosphoproteins on electroblot membranes using a small‐molecule organic fluorophore

Abstract
A new formulation of the small-molecule organic fluorophore, Pro-Q® Diamond dye, has been developed that permits rapid and simple detection of phosphoproteins directly on polyvinylidene difluoride (PVDF) or nitrocellulose membranes (electroblots). Protein samples are first separated by electrophoresis and then electroblotted to membranes, stained and destained, in an analogous manner as typically performed with Amido Black or Ponceau S dye staining of total protein profiles. After staining, blots are imaged using any of a variety of laser-based gel scanners, xenon-arc lamp-based gel scanners or charge-coupled device (CCD) camera-based imaging devices equipped with UV trans- or epi-illumination. The uncomplicated and reliable staining protocol delivers results in as little as 1 h and the limit of detection for the stain is typically 2–4 ng of phosphoprotein with a linear dynamic range of approximately 15-fold. Compared with traditional radiolabeling and antibody-based approaches, the new method offers significant advantages, including avoidance of radioactivity, no need for expensive antibodies, no requirement for blocking unoccupied sites on the membrane with protein or detergent solutions, no sequence context-specific binding to phosphorylated amino acid residues and the ability to analyze the native, steady-state phosphorylation of proteins obtained directly from tissue specimens or body fluids. Pro-Q Diamond dye binds directly and exclusively to the phosphate moiety, allowing it to detect the broadest spectrum of phosphorylated proteins possible. The stain binds noncovalently to phosphoproteins and is thus fully compatible with matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization-time of flight-mass spectrometry (MALDI-TOF-MS) or Edman sequencing. The blot stain is also compatible with standard colorimetric, fluorogenic, and chemiluminescent detection techniques employed in immunoblotting.

This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit: