Abstract

The cationic dye, Alcian blue, previously used as a glycoprotein-specific stain on cellulose acetate and polyacrylamide gels, was found to be capable of staining a variety of purified proteins and each of the components of the human platelet presently identifiable with Coomassie blue R or periodic acid-Schiff (PAS) reagent in sodium alkyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoretic preparations. Evidence was obtained to indicate that staining of detergent-protein complexes by Alcian blue occurs by virtue of the affinity of the stain for accessible sulfate groups of detergent molecules, especially sodium tetradecyl sulfate, hydrophobically associated with polypeptide chains. Thus, Alcian blue fails to stain nonglycosylated proteins when pure sodium dodecyl sulfate (C 12) is used as the detergent, but does so readily when small quantities of sodium tetradecyl sulfate are also present. The advantages of using Alcian blue to determine platelet protein composition and to make quantitative comparisons between bands in sodium alkyl sulfate gels are discussed.

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