Difference between revisions of "Team:Pasteur Paris/Results"

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We first tested the ability of our protein to bind to cellulose. To do that, we used several types of cellulose: Avicell, Sigmacell, and carboxymethyl-cellulose. As described by Goldstein et al<sup>1</sup>, we mixed cellulose with an excess of competitor non-specific protein (BSA), and with or without our protein of interest (Fig. 8A). After washing and centrifugation, we harvested proteins from supernatant and the cellulose-based pellet in order to analyze them by SDS-PAGE. We clearly noted that the 25 kDa and 50 kDa proteins were <B>retained by cellulose</B>, instead of the non-specific BSA (Fig. 8B). Indeed, data showed that almost no monomer remained in the supernatant after the second wash, but the pellet contained most of the protein. However, some dimers seem to remain in the second washing supernatant because the initial protein concentration was too high: the binding sites were saturated. The pellet also contains a lot of the dimers. As <B>control</B>, we observed that BSA remained in the supernatant and didn’t bind to cellulose.  Therefore, we can conclude that our protein binds to cellulose.  
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We first tested the ability of our protein to bind to cellulose. To do that, we used several types of cellulose: Avicell, Sigmacell, and carboxymethyl-cellulose. As described by Goldstein et al<sup>1</sup>, we mixed cellulose with an excess of competitor non-specific protein (BSA), and with or without our protein of interest (Fig. 8A). After washing and centrifugation, we harvested proteins from supernatant and the cellulose-based pellet in order to analyze them by SDS-PAGE. We clearly noted that the 25 kDa and 50 kDa proteins were <B>retained by cellulose</B>, instead of the non-specific BSA (Fig. 8B). Indeed, data showed that almost no monomer remained in the supernatant after the second wash, but the pellet contained most of the protein. However, some dimers seem to remain in the second washing supernatant because the initial protein concentration was too high: the binding sites were saturated. The pellet also contains a lot of the dimers. As <B>control</B>, we observed that BSA remained in the supernatant and didn’t bind to cellulose.  Therefore, we can conclude that our protein binds to cellulose. </br></br></br></br>
<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/a/a4/T--Pasteur_Paris--Results8.png" width="100%" alt="image"/></img>
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<img src="https://static.igem.org/mediawiki/2016/a/a4/T--Pasteur_Paris--Results8.png" width="100%" alt="image"/></img>
 
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Revision as of 01:31, 20 October 2016