4.0 Article

High-Throughput Thermal Scanning for Protein Stability: Making a Good Technique More Robust

Journal

ACS COMBINATORIAL SCIENCE
Volume 15, Issue 8, Pages 387-392

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/co400013v

Keywords

differential scanning fluorimetry; protein stability; thermal shift assay; thermofluor; protein unfolding; formulation

Funding

  1. Materials Science and Engineering division of the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO)

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We present a high-throughput approach to help define experimental formulations that enhance protein stability, which is based on differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF). The method involves defining the thermal stability of a protein against a screen of 13 buffer systems, systematically sampling pH from 5.0 to 9.0 at high and low salt concentrations, using both redundancy and extensive controls to make the method robust. The screen allows rapid determination of a suitable base formulation for protein samples, and is particularly useful for difficult samples: those that are rapidly degraded or cannot be sufficiently concentrated for downstream analyses. Data obtained from three samples in this assay illustrate the vastly different values for thermal stability that can be obtained from different formulations. This approach is simple to interpret and reliable enough that it has been implemented as a service through the Collaborative Crystallisation Centre (C3).

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