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. 1986 Feb;27(2):201-7.
doi: 10.1111/j.1399-3011.1986.tb01811.x.

Use of microbore high-performance liquid chromatography for purifying subnanomole levels of polypeptides for microsequencing. Structural studies on the murine plasma cell antigen PC-1

Use of microbore high-performance liquid chromatography for purifying subnanomole levels of polypeptides for microsequencing. Structural studies on the murine plasma cell antigen PC-1

B Grego et al. Int J Pept Protein Res. 1986 Feb.

Abstract

A procedure for the purification of subnanomole levels of polypeptides has been developed. Reversed-phase high performance liquid chromatography on short (10 cm or less) microbore (1-2 mm internal diameter) columns has been used to fractionate and purify a number of tryptic peptides generated from approximately 600 pmol of purified murine plasma cell antigen PC-1, a major membrane glycoprotein on all cells secreting immunoglobulins. The use of reversed-phase microbore columns permits the recovery of subnanomole amounts of polypeptides from large volumes in high yield (greater than 90%) and in small eluent volumes (40-60 microL) which can be loaded directly onto the gas-phase sequencer without further concentration. This procedure avoids the severe sample loss which frequently occurs with other concentration procedures such as lyophilization and evaporation. The use of a photodiode-array detector for identifying tryptophan-containing peptides from on-the-fly, ultraviolet spectra is described. This procedure permits the selection of tryptophan-containing peptides from complex tryptic digests for use as candidate peptides for oligonucleotide probe construction. Automated Edman degradation was performed on seven tryptic peptides, yielding 110 unique assignments; this corresponds to approximately 11% of the molecule.

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