Immobilized Trypsin
Immobilized Trypsin is TPCK Treated Trypsin immobilized on 4% agarose that eliminates the contamination of protein digests by the trypsin. The immobilized trypsin is readily removed by separating the agarose from the digestion solution.
Trypsin is a serine endopeptidase that specifically cleaves peptide bonds on the carboxy side of s-aminoethyl cysteine, arginine and lysine residues and typically there is little or no cleavage at arginyl-proline and lysyl-proline bonds. The distribution of these residues in proteins allows trypsin digestion to produce peptides that are readily identified by mass spectrometry.
Native trypsin is prone to autolysis that results in pseudotrypsin, which exhibits a broader proteolytic specificity (a chymotrypsin like activity) and trypsin fragments that interfere with sequence analysis.
The Trypsin is TPCK treated to inactive the interfering chymotrypsin activity and the resulting protein is affinity purified.
Immobilzed Trypsin is supplied as a 50% slurry containing glycerol and sodium azide as a preservative.
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Features
- Eliminate contamination with trypsin
- Source: Bovine
- Activity: ≥200 TAME units/ml resin (1 unit= 1µmole TAME (p-toluenesulfonyl-L-arginine methyl ester) hydrolyzed/min at pH8.2, 25°C)
- Support: 4% Cross-linked Agarose
Protocol | |
786-792 |
Material Safety Data Sheet | |
786-792 |
Technical Literature | |
Mass Spectrometry Sample Prep Handbook | A guide to the preparation of protein samples for Mass Spectrometry, including protein extraction, clean-up and peptide generation. |
Protease & Phosphatase Inhibitors & Proteases Handbook | A handbook & selection guide for inhibitors of protease & phosphatases & for proteases & assays |