Blue silver: a very sensitive colloidal Coomassie G‐250 staining for proteome analysis

G Candiano, M Bruschi, L Musante, L Santucci… - …, 2004 - Wiley Online Library
G Candiano, M Bruschi, L Musante, L Santucci, GM Ghiggeri, B Carnemolla, P Orecchia…
Electrophoresis, 2004Wiley Online Library
A modified Neuhoff's colloidal Coomassie Blue G‐250 stain is reported, dubbed “blue silver”
on account of its considerably higher sensitivity, approaching the one of conventional silver
staining. The main modifications, as compared to Neuhoff's protocol, were: a 20% increment
in dye concentration (from 0.1% up to 0.12%) and a much higher level of phosphoric acid in
the recipe (from 2% up to 10%). The “blue silver” exhibits a much faster dye uptake (80%
during the first hour of coloration, vs. none with a commercial preparation from Sigma). Even …
Abstract
A modified Neuhoff's colloidal Coomassie Blue G‐250 stain is reported, dubbed “blue silver” on account of its considerably higher sensitivity, approaching the one of conventional silver staining. The main modifications, as compared to Neuhoff's protocol, were: a 20% increment in dye concentration (from 0.1% up to 0.12%) and a much higher level of phosphoric acid in the recipe (from 2% up to 10%). The “blue silver” exhibits a much faster dye uptake (80% during the first hour of coloration, vs. none with a commercial preparation from Sigma). Even at equilibrium (24 h staining), the “blue silver” exhibits a much higher sensitivity than all other recipes, approaching (but lower than) the one of the classical silver stain. Measurements of stain sensitivity after sodium dodecyl sulfate‐polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS‐PAGE) of bovine serum albumin (BSA) gave a detection limit (signal‐to‐noise ratio > 3) of 1 ng in a single zone. The somewhat lower sensitivity of “blue silver” as compared to classical silvering protocols in the presence of aldehydes is amply compensated for by its full compatibility with mass spectrometry of eluted polypeptide chains, after a two‐dimensional map analysis, thus confirming that no dye is covalently bound (or permanently modifies) to any residue in the proteinaceous material. It is believed that the higher level of phosphoric acid in the recipe, thus its lower final pH, helps in protonating the last dissociated residues of Asp and Glu in the polypeptide coils, thus greatly favoring ionic anchoring of dye molecules to the protein moiety. Such a binding, though, must be followed by considerable hydrophobic association with the aromatic and hydrophobic residues along the polypeptide backbone.
Wiley Online Library