Abstract

Measurement of protein denaturation and protein folding is a common laboratory technique used in undergraduate biochemistry laboratories. Differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) provides a rapid, sensitive, and general method for measuring protein thermal stability in an undergraduate biochemistry laboratory. In this method, the thermal denaturation of multiple different proteins is determined in parallel using a reverse-transcription polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) machine and a hydrophobic dye that differentially binds to proteins in non-native conformations. The utility of this methodology is illustrated by the measurement of differential protein stability in microplate volumes, in triplicate, with small protein samples. These characteristics make DSF measurement of protein stability adaptable to use with noncommercial protein samples. The methodology is also expandable to quantitating protein stability under a wide variety of solution conditions. The rapid setup and analysis of DSF experiments not ...

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