Hello Qiangmin, Many membrane proteins like to aggregate in detergent, which will prevent efficient site specific proteolysis. If you have not already done so, I suggest running a size exclusion column first to verify that your protein is monodisperse in your detergent and buffer of choice.
I have also heard from a few other researchers that GFP fusion can sometimes promote aggregation. I'd appreciate hearing from others how often they have encountered GFP-mediated aggregation, whether with membrane or soluble proteins. Ho Ho Leung Ng University of Hawaii at Manoa Assistant Professor, Department of Chemistry h...@hawaii.edu On Mon, Apr 8, 2013 at 1:01 PM, CCP4BB automatic digest system <lists...@jiscmail.ac.uk> wrote: > Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2013 01:22:36 +0800 > From: Qiangmin Zhang <zhangqia...@outlook.com> > Subject: Anyone has experience with digesting membrane protein by precession > protease > > Hello everybody, > I just purified a membrane protein tagged with GFP, which has a cleavage site > of precession protease. And I got a problem with removing the GFP tag by > precession protease (1mM DTT and 1 mM EDTA were included in the buffer). It > can not cut my protein. I have already tried to digest it in different > detergent like DDM and C12E8 (also different concentration for detergent like > lowering the detergent to 1.1 x cmc since a recent science paper lowered the > detergent to this level and got it worked). I know this depends on the > different proteins. I am wondering if anyone has this experience in digesting > membrane protein by precession protease. Any suggestions are appreciated. > Otherwise I might have to go back to just his-tag if there is no trick for > that. Thank you so much in advance. > All the best > Qiangmin Zhang