The 2-D electrophoresis reference article from the English Wikipedia on 24-Jul-2004
(provided by Fixed Reference: snapshots of Wikipedia from wikipedia.org)

2-D electrophoresis

For people who check facts
In proteomics, 2-D electrophoresis is used to separate proteins by their isoelectric point, and then by their mass. This procedure has two main applications: simultaneous identification of mass quantities of proteins, and differential expression.

2-D gel electrophoresis is a multistep procedure that can be used to separate hundreds to thousands of proteins with extremely high resolution. It works by separation of proteins by their pI's in one dimension using an immobilized pH gradient (first dimension: isoelectric focusing) and then by their MW's in the second dimension. Gel density in the SDS second dimension can be of a fixed value between 8% and 12% (%T) or a gradient (7.5 - 15%). The resulting gel is then Coomassie Blue or silver stained for viewing the protein spots. All gels are then scanned using a GS-800 calibrated densitometerfrom which one can obtain TIFF files of the image. We also can perform image analysis using PDQuest software version 7.0 from Bio-Rad. This software permits the comparison and analysis of replicates of gels to determine statistically and scientifically meaningful spots. Proteins of interest then can be excised from the gel, characterized and identified by mass spectrometry.

To summarize, 2-D gel electrophoresis process consists of these steps:

-Sample preparation -First dimension isoelectric focusing -Second dimension gel electrophoresis -Staining -Imaging analysis


See also: electrophoresis

External links

This article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.