Size and Shape of Protein Molecules at the Nanometer Level Determined by Sedimentation, Gel Filtration, and Electron Microscopy
Duke Medical Center · Duke University · +1 more institution
Abstract
An important part of characterizing any protein molecule is to determine its size and shape. Sedimentation and gel filtration are hydrodynamic techniques that can be used for this medium resolution structural analysis. This review collects a number of simple calculations that are useful for thinking about protein structure at the nanometer level. Readers are reminded that the Perrin equation is generally not a valid approach to determine the shape of proteins. Instead, a simple guideline is presented, based on the measured sedimentation coefficient and a calculated maximum S, to estimate if a protein is globular or elongated. It is recalled that a gel filtration column fractionates proteins on the basis of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 7.40
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 30
Authors
1Topics & keywords
- Size-exclusion chromatography
- Stokes radius
- Nanometre
- Electron microscope
- Chemistry
- Filtration (mathematics)
- Sedimentation
- Negative stain