This video demonstrates the in vitro measurement of enzyme activity for α-galactosidase A and acid α-glucosidase in samples using synthetic 4-Methylumbelliferyl substrates.
Protocol
1. Cell Harvest and α-galactosidase A or Acid α-glucosidase Activity Measurement
Cell harvest
On the day of the harvest, remove the cells from the incubator and aspirate the medium. Carefully wash the cells 2 times with PBS with Ca2+ and Mg2+. NOTE: This step is critical because DGJ and DNJ are potent inhibitors of α-galactosidase and α-glucosidase, respectively, and any leftover would invalidate the test.
Add 200 µL of deionized water directly on top of the cells. Rinse the cells from the plate and transfer them to a 1.5 mL reaction tube.
2. Homogenization by freezing and thawing
Put the samples in an appropriate foam rack and vortex for 5 s to make the lysis more efficient. Put the samples alternating in liquid nitrogen for 10 s and in a room-temperature water bath until the thawing was complete (5 min).
Repeat this procedure 5 times and then spin the samples for 5 min at 10,000 x g. Retain the supernatant and pipette in a new reaction tube.
3. Protein concentration determination using bicinchoninic acid (BCA) assay
Prepare a fresh tube for each sample containing 40 µL of deionized H2O and add 10 µL of the sample. Mix solution by vortexing briefly and transfer 10 µL into a cavity of a 96 well plate (each sample in triplicate). Dilute a 2 mg/mL bovine serum albumin (BSA) stock solution in deionized H2O as follows to obtain a standard curve: 50 µL H2O/50 µL BSA; 60 µL H2O/40 µL BSA; 70 µL H2O/30 µL BSA; 80 µL H2O/20 µL BSA; 90 µL H2O/10 µL BSA; 100 µL H2O.
Start the reaction by adding 200 µL of BCA reagent (Reagent A and reagent B mixed at a 50:1 ratio) and incubate for 1 h in the dark at 37 °C under slight agitation on an orbital shaker (300 rpm). Measure the absorbance at 560 nm in a plate reader. NOTE: The samples typically contain between 1 and 1.5 µg protein per µL.
4. Enzyme activity measurement with artificial 4-Methylumbelliferyl substrates (4-MUG)
Dilute the calculated amount of each sample and pipet into fresh 1.5 mL reaction tubes to obtain 0.05 (for α-galactosidase A) or 0.5 (for acid α-glucosidase) µg protein/µL solutions. Vortex the samples for 5 s again and pipet 10 µL of this dilution into a 96-well plate (each sample in duplicate).
Start the reaction by adding 20 µL of the respective substrate solution:
For α-galactosidase A: 2 mM 4-Methylumbelliferyl-α-D-galactopyranoside (4-MU-gal) in 0.06 M phosphate citrate buffer, pH 4.7.
For acid α-glucosidase: 2 mM 4-methylumbelliferyl α-D-glucopyranoside (4-MU-glu) in 0.025 M sodium acetate, pH 4.0.
Incubate the enzyme reactions for 1 h in the dark at 37 °C under slight agitation on an orbital shaker (300 rpm). Terminate the reaction by the addition of 200 µL of 1.0 M, pH 10.5 adjusted glycine-NaOH buffer.
Prepare a standard curve of 4-methylumbelliferone (4-MU) from a 0.01 mg/mL stock as follows:
100 µL H2O/ no 4-MU; 80 µL H2O/ 20 µL 4-MU; 60 µL H2O/ 40 µL 4-MU; 40 µL H2O/ 60 µL 4-MU; 20 µL H2O/ 80 µL 4-MU; no H2O/ 100 µL 4-MU, pipet 10 µL of each dilution into the 96 well plate (in duplicates) and add 200 µL of the 1.0 M glycine-NaOH buffer to each well in order to adjust the volume and pH.
Measure the enzyme activity in a fluorescence reader equipped with the appropriate filter set and analyze the data using the appropriate software for the fluorescence reader device. NOTE: Both 4-MUG substrates are reduced to 4-MU during exposure to α-galactosidase A or acid α-glucosidase. Released 4-MU is a fluorochrome, which can be measured at 360 and 465 nm as the excitation and emission wavelengths, respectively, using a microplate fluorescence reader.