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AbstractAbstract
[en] Compressed and stretched polyacrylamide hydrogels previously have been shown to offer a robust method for aligning proteins. A simple, funnel-like apparatus is described for generating uniformly stretched hydrogels. For prolate-shaped proteins, gels stretched in the direction of the magnetic field yield two-fold larger alignment than gels compressed to the same aspect ratio in this direction. Empirically, protein alignment is found to be proportional to (c-2.3)2 [(do/dN)3-1], where do and dN are the diameters of the cylindrical gels before and after stretching, respectively, and c is the polyacrylamide weight fraction in percent. Low gel densities, in the 4-7% range, are found to have minimal effects on macromolecular rotational correlation times, τc, and no effect of the compression ratio on τc could be discerned over the range studied (do/dNle1.4). Application is demonstrated for a sample containing the first Ig-binding domain of protein G, and for a detergent-solubilized peptide
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Copyright (c) 2001 Kluwer Academic Publishers; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
Record Type
Journal Article
Journal
Journal of Biomolecular NMR; ISSN 0925-2738;
; v. 21(4); p. 377-382

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