Abstract

Standard procedures for one-dimensional discontinuous sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS)-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and silver staining were modified to give more effective separation and an improved resolution of human skeletal muscle proteins. In this system, an electrophoresis buffer composed of 100 m ml-isoleucine, 25 m m Tris base, and 0.1% SDS was used. The separating gel consisted of 16% acrylamide with N,N′-methylenebisacrylamide as a crosslinker (1:23), 0.4% SDS, 1.5 m Tris-HCl, pH 8.8. By the present procedure, the slow and the fast forms of myosin light chains (LCs, LCf) and other contractile proteins from human muscle could be better separated. The silver stain is based on a combination of methods previously described. The modified method requires a small fragment of a single fiber to observe as few as 10 ng of myofibrillar muscle proteins. The described simplifications made it possible to assay and compare up to 40 single fibers in the same electrophoretic run. Improved separation of other proteins migrating at basic pH could be achieved by a similar approach.

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