Biology A/B
Animals by Serum Electrophoresis
Student Instructions
Index:
- Students will use a centrifuge to separate serum from cells and explain how density separates the two. (Physics)
- Students will describe how the electrophoresis apparatus, with the buffer, works. (Chemistry/Physics)
- Students will learn to properly cast agarose gels and prepare their own buffers. (Chemistry/Molecular Biology)
- Students will describe the basic structure of proteins, the effect of pH on protein charge, and the need to carefully select the pH of the running buffer. (Biology/Molecular Biology)
- Students will electrophorese varying concentrations of serum to discover the relationship between serum concentration and resolution possible by staining with coomassie blue. (Molecular Biology)
- Students will run their unknown serum against a set of known serum standards and determine the animal source of their serum. (Molecular Biology)
- Students will correctly write a lab report with the following sections: Objectives, Materials and Equipment, Safety Precautions (check reagents with the Merck Index or other safety reference), Procedure (stepwise), Hypothesis, Data Table, Observations, Conclusions, and Extensions (questions which point us where we want to go next or hypotheses as to why the lab did not run as expected). The underlined sections of the report will be finished before starting the lab. (General Science)
- 1 set of the following for each 4 person lab group.
- Running Buffer (Tris/Glycine, pH 8.3)
- 1 unknown animal blood sample
- Distilled water
- Graduated Cylinder
- Electrophoresis Grade:
- Agarose*
- Glycine*
- Tris Base*
- SDS*
- Plastic tub for holding gel during stain/destain*
- Masking Tape (if necessary) Plastic storage containers with lids for stain
- Sheep, Rabbit, Cow, Pig, Moose sera standards, (can be self-prepped) prediluted with Running Buffer and stained with bromophenol blue.
- Plastic Transfer Pipet
- Plastic Wrap
- 10 M NaOH*
- Distilled water*
- Coomassie Staining Solution*
- Destaining Solution*
Class Set
- 1 Flat Bed Electrophoresis Apparatus (preferrably a type that allows you to cast outside of the apparatus and then insert a ready gel when a lab group is ready to run otherwise it will take more time)
- 1 Power Supply
- Timer (to remind you to stop a running gel)
- Centrifuge
- 1.5 mL Microcentrifuge tubes (to store serum)
- 20 mL Pipettor
- 200 mL Pipettor
- 1000 mL Pipettor (nice to have but not absolutely necessary) or 1 mL serological pipet.
- Bio-Rad Prot/Elec pipet tips (these tips are small enough to load verticle gels and allow some
- student error when loading submersed gels)
- pH meter or pH test paper covering a range of pH 8-11
- Stir Plate with Stir Bar
Time Needed to Complete This
Activity
This activity requires three to four
50 minute class periods to complete all phases. It can take less
if the instructor or teacher assistants
pre-make all of the reagents and gels.
Safety Precautions - Toxic
Waste Collection/Disposal Instructions
Coomassie Blue stains all proteins.
Use with gloves and aprons. Electrophoresis apparatus uses high
voltage. Make sure the lid and all wires are
securely in place before turning on the power supply. Destaining
solution should be burned in a designated facility due to the
presence of methyl alcohol.
Agarose Gel
- 0.010 g Electrophoresis Grade Agarose for every milliliter of Electrode Buffer
Electrode Buffer
(for running gels, horizontal and vertical)
- 9.08 g Tris Base
- 43.28 g Glycine
- 1.5 g SDS
Procedure:
- mix all chemicals in proper order.
- Add 500 ml of water to dilute.
- Adjust pH to 8.30 using 10 M NaOH.
Staining Solution
(for staining proteins, sera, enzymes, etc.)
- 250 ml MeOH
- 50 ml Glacial Acetic Acid
- 1 g Coomassie Blue
- 200 ml water
Procedure:
- mix all chemicals in proper order.
- Add 500 ml of water to dilute.
Destaining Solution (for coomassie destaining)
- 100 ml MeOH
- 50 ml Glacial Acetic Acid
- 350 ml water
On the first day pick up a complete
set of lab group materials and equipment. You will make a gel
today and let
it set up for use tomorrow. Your
instructor will tell you how many milliliters of gel you will
be making. You will need to prepare a concentration of agarose
that is 0.010 grams of agarose per milliliter. Weigh out the
proper amount of agarose and add to it a volume of the running
buffer that matches the volume of gel you need to produce.
Place your agarose/buffer mixture
into a boiling water bath. You will notice that the agarose will
melt into the buffer. When all of your agarose has melted and
the consistency is uniform you are ready to cast the gel. If
you have a casting tray that is separate from your electrophoresis
chamber, make sure that the ends are completely sealed with tape.
If your casting tray is part of your electrophoresis chamber,
make sure that the plastic inserts for your casting chamber are
securely in place. Mark your casting tray 5.0 millimeters from
the negative electrode side.
Pour the gel into your gel casting
tray. Use a plastic pipet to remove bubbles that form during
pouring. Line up the comb with the marks made 5.0 millimeters
from the negative electrode side, then insert your comb. Allow
your gel to set up, this will take approximately 30 minutes.
When your gel is set up remove the comb by pulling straight up
on the comb. You have now created wells in your gel. Avoid removing
the comb at an angle because it may tear the gel. Wrap your apparatus
with plastic wrap to reduce loss of moisture from the gel.
The next day, unwrap your gel, remove
either the masking tape or the plastic inserts from the electrophoresis
chamber and if your casting tray is separate from the electrophoresis
set your gel into the electrophoresis chamber. Pour running buffer
into the electrophoresis chamber until the gel is covered by the
buffer. Pour slowly so air is not trapped in the wells made by
the comb. If air is trapped in the well, get another plastic
transfer pipet and gently squirt buffer into the wells, dislodging
the air bubbles.
Using clean pipets designed to deliver
10 ml,
pipet 10 ml
of each of your standard sera. Pipet your unknown into a lane
near your standards. Your teacher may ask you to share your gel
with one or more other groups so they may also pipet their unknowns
onto your gel. Do not use the outside lanes on the gel. Your
gel is now loaded and ready to run.
Put the cover securely onto the electrophoresis
chamber and attach the leads to the power supply. The red lead
goes to the red connection and the black lead goes to the black
connection. Turn on the power supply and set it to deliver constant
voltage. Set the voltage to 100 volts (if your power supply does
not deliver 100 volts, set it to the voltage closest to 100 volts).
For power supplies equipped with a start button, press the start
button. As electricity flows through the chamber, you will notice
that bubbles are forming at both electrodes. The positive electrode
is attracting oxygen from the electrolysis of water. The negative
electrode is attracting hydrogen from the same electrolysis.
You will also notice that the dye in the standard sera will begin
to move to the positive electrode. If it is going the other direction,
check the connections and make sure that red and black leads and
connections match.
Your gel will take most of the time
available this class period. You have some time to replenish
the electrode buffer solution. Using the preceding electrode
buffer recipe, weigh out the proper amounts of tris base, glycine,
and SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate, a detergent). Add the proper
amount of distilled water and mix this on the magnetic stirrer.
As the solids dissolve, hook up the pH meter, set it to standby,
and with the electrode arm immerse the tip of the pH electrode
below the surface the pH 7.0, standard buffer. Check the pH,
adjust the pH to read 7.0. Reset the pH meter to standby, lift
the electrode out of the standard buffer and place an empty beaker
under the electrode tip. Rinse the electrode tip with the distilled
water in the squirt bottle. Wipe the electrode with a lab tissue
(Kimwipe or other brand). Now you will immerse the tip of the
electrode below the surface of the buffer dissolving on the magnetic
stirrer. Check the pH. If the pH is below 8.3, add 10 M NaOH
(sodium hydroxide) to the buffer one drop at a time. After the
pH is above 8.1, stop the stirrer. Notice if the pH remains the
same, drops, or increases above the reading that you just took.
The amount of change is the amount of error caused by the motion
of the ions in the buffer past your pH electrode. With this in
mind continue to add NaOH dropwise to the buffer. Periodically
stop the magnetic stirrer so you can get an accurate pH reading.
When the pH equals 8.3 ± 0.05 you have successfully made
the buffer.
Clean up your lab station and the
buffer/pH station. Check the progress of your gel. If the blue
dye of the standards is within 5 millimeters of the end of the
gel, stop the electrophoresis by pushing the stop button on the
power supply or turn off your power supply. Pour the used buffer
into the used buffer bottle. Carefully mark your gel by poking
a toothpick into the gel above the wells. If you are lab group
1, poke one hole. If you are lab group 2 poke two holes. DO
NOT poke holes in the main area of the gel. Gently lift the gel
out of the electrophoresis chamber and put it into a lidded plastic
container that is large enough to hold your gel flat. If you
are the first to finish, you will need to pour the coomassie blue
staining solution onto your gel so that it is fully covered.
If you are sharing a gel staining container, insert your gel
and make sure there is enough staining solution to cover your
gel. Let the gel sit in the staining solution for one hour or
more. Clean up your electrophoresis equipment by rinsing it with
cold tap water and then several times with distilled water. Let
the apparatus air dry. If the class ends before your gel is done,
inform your teacher who will shut down your lab and put the gel
into the staining solution. You will still be responsible for
pouring your buffer into the proper container and rinsing your
equipment.
The next day pour off the coomassie
blue stain solution back into its bottle. Place the stained gel
into another lidded plastic container that is large enough to
hold your gel flat. Pour destaining solution into the container
until the destaining solution covers your gel. When the color
of the destaining solution and the gel are the same color of blue,
it has come to equilibrium and the gel will not destain any more.
Pour off the destaining solution into the used destain container.
Check your gel. If you have nice clean bands in the serum standards
then you may stop destaining. If your gel is still too blue,
continue the destaining process, making sure you allow the gel
and the solution to come to equilibrium, until you get nice clean
standards. Your used destain will be burned due to the presence
of methyl alcohol (MeOH).
Compare your unknown serum with the
standard sera. You should be able to determine the type of animal
by matching the unknown with a standard that is the same. Place
your gel onto a clear glass plate that is larger than the gel.
Let it dry in the open air. It should be dry by tomorrow.
Obtain a photocopy of your dry gel.
Then clean up the glass plate by softening the gel under warm
running water. Slide the gel into the trash can (you may need
to use your fingernails to scrape it off) and wash your glassware.
Observations:
Write down what you noticed with your five senses.
Conclusions
Use what you noticed, compare this
with your hypothesis and textual material and explain what you
think happened in the experiment.
Extensions
Explain ways to improve the lab,
reduce discrepancies, reduce procedural errors, and things
you can do to find out more about the
blood sample.
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