Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit
User Manuals
| Document Title | Type of Manual | Document Number |
| TALON PMAC Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit | User Manual | PT3731-1 |
Clontechniques
| Title | Issue |
| Enriching Posttranslationally-Modified Proteins | July 2008 |
| Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit | July 2004 |
| Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit | April 2003 |
Product Literature
Certificates of Analysis
Frequently Asked Questions
The Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit provides an effective affinity-based procedure for isolating phosphorylated proteins from mammalian cells and tissues (Figure 1). Each kit includes a complete set of buffers along with six high-capacity columns for enrichment of both cytosolic and membrane-bound phosphoproteins regardless of the amino acid modified—including serine, tyrosine, or threonine.
Our enrichment procedure offers a number of advantages. The procedure is fast; the average cell-to-sample purification time is less than 2 hours. It is also straightforward, consisting of four main steps (Figure 2): adding Extraction/ Loading Buffer to the cell or tissue pellet to extract total cellular protein, loading the extract on an affinity column, washing, and finally eluting the bound phosphoprotein with a detergent-free Elution Buffer. A single buffer—Extraction/ Loading Buffer—is used for both the protein extraction and affinity column steps, making buffer exchange unnecessary. This saves time and prevents sample loss. Each column has a maximum binding capacity of ~4 mg of phosphorylated protein, and the procedure is nondenaturing, so phosphoproteins remain folded throughout the process, even during the extraction and elution steps.
Highly Selective Enrichment of Phosphoproteins
The Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit may be used with any mammalian cell type. Cell lines tested include NIH 3T3, HEK 293, HeLa, Cos-7, and Jurkat. The enrichment procedure is highly efficient as demonstrated by Western blotting analyses (Figure 1). Using a colorimetric phosphate detection method, we found the majority of the phosphoprotein in the eluate; negligible traces were detected in the wash fraction.
Phosphoprotein Affinity Columns yield a concentrated solution of phosphoprotein that can be analyzed by several different methods, including mass spectrometry and two-dimensional polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (2D-PAGE).
Figure 1. Highly effective enrichment of phosphorylated proteins. A Phosphoprotein Affinity Column was loaded with ~3 mg of total protein from HEK 293 cells. The extract (Lanes 1), flowthrough (Lanes 2), wash (Lanes 3), and eluate (Lanes 4) were then analyzed by Western blotting using antibodies specific for phosphorylated AKT (Panel A), PTEN (Panel B), and GSK3β (Panel C) proteins. The phosphorylated proteins were clearly detected in the eluate fraction. Please note that samples were not diluted, nor concentrated before loading on the gel.
Figure 2. Overview of the Phosphoprotein Enrichment Procedure. Extraction/Loading Buffer contains a mild, non-ionic detergent for efficient, non-denaturing extraction of cellular protein.
Applications |
References1. Alberts, B., Bray, D., Lewis, K., Raff, M., et al. (1994) In Molecular Biology of the Cell, 3rd ed., (Garland Publishing, NY), pp. 195–222.2. Ficarro, S. B., et al. (2002) Nature Biotechnol. 20:301–305. 3. BD™ Phosphoprotein Enrichment Kit (April 2003) Clontechniques XVIII(2):4–5. |
ComponentsPhosphoprotein Affinity Columns |
Storage Conditions4°C |

