Unit

UNIT 28.9 Analysis of Protein Stability and Ligand Interactions by Thermal Shift Assay

  1. Kathy Huynh,
  2. Carrie L. Partch

Published Online: 2 FEB 2015

DOI: 10.1002/0471140864.ps2809s79

Current Protocols in Protein Science

Current Protocols in Protein Science

How to Cite

Huynh, K. and Partch, C.L. 2015. Analysis of Protein Stability and Ligand Interactions by Thermal Shift Assay. Curr. Protoc. Protein Sci. 79:28.9.1-28.9.14. doi: 10.1002/0471140864.ps2809s79

Author Information

  1. Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of California Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, California

Publication History

  1. Published Online: 2 FEB 2015

Abstract

Purification of recombinant proteins for biochemical assays and structural studies is time-consuming and presents inherent difficulties that depend on the optimization of protein stability. The use of dyes to monitor thermal denaturation of proteins with sensitive fluorescence detection enables rapid and inexpensive determination of protein stability using real-time PCR instruments. By screening a wide range of solution conditions and additives in a 96-well format, the thermal shift assay easily identifies conditions that significantly enhance the stability of recombinant proteins. The same approach can be used as an initial low-cost screen to discover new protein-ligand interactions by capitalizing on increases in protein stability that typically occur upon ligand binding. This unit presents a methodological workflow for small-scale, high-throughput thermal denaturation of recombinant proteins in the presence of SYPRO Orange dye. © 2015 by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Keywords:

  • differential scanning fluorimetry;
  • TSA;
  • ThermoFluor;
  • thermal denaturation;
  • buffer optimization;
  • ligand screening