Proteases break peptide bonds. In the lab, it is often necessary to measure and/or compare the activity of proteases. Sigma’s non-specific protease activity assay may be used as a standardized procedure to determine the activity of proteases.
Proteases break peptide bonds. In the lab, it is often necessary to measure and/or compare the activity of proteases. Sigma’s non-specific protease activity assay may be used as a standardized procedure to determine the activity of proteases, which is what we do during our quality control procedures. In this assay, casein acts as a substrate. When the protease we are testing digests casein, the amino acid tyrosine is liberated along with other amino acids and peptide fragments. Folin and Ciocalteus Phenol, or Folin’s reagent primarily reacts with free tyrosine to produce a blue colored chromophore, which is quantifiable and measured as an absorbance value on the spectrophotometer. The more tyrosine that is released from casein, the more the chromophores are generated and the stronger the activity of the protease. Absorbance values generated by the activity of the protease are compared to a standard curve, which is generated by reacting known quantities of tyrosine with the F-C reagent to correlate changes in absorbance with the amount of tyrosine in micromoles. From the standard curve the activity of protease samples can be determined in terms of Units, which is the amount in micromoles of tyrosine equivalents released from casein per minute.
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Before beginning the assay, we need to make sure that the following reagents are correctly prepared:
If necessary, use a solid protease sample of predetermined activity, which is dissolved using enzyme diluent to 0.1-0.2 units/ml. This solution serves as a positive control for the quality control assay and as validation for the calculations we will perform to determine enzyme activity.
Setting up the Protease Assay and Standard Curves
Measuring Absorbance and Calculating Enzyme Activity
Volume of Tyrosine Standard | uMoles Tyrosine |
0.05 | 0.055 |
0.10 | 0.111 |
0.20 | 0.221 |
0.40 | 0.442 |
0.50 | 0.553 |
We’ve just shown you how to analyze protease activity using Sigma’s universal protease activity assay. In addition, this assay is useful to ensure that our proteases have precisely determined activity before you receive them for your experiments. As you have seen, when doing this procedure, it’s of paramount importance to remember to heat both the casein and tyrosine solutions slowly and not to boil them. Also, it’s critical to prepare different blanks for both your standards and for each test sample that you have.
Protease | Sigma-Aldrich | P4630 | |
Potassium Phosphate, Dibasic, Trihydrate | Sigma-Aldrich | P5504 | |
Casein | Sigma-Aldrich | C7078 | |
Trichloroacetic Acid | Sigma-Aldrich | T0699 | |
Folin & Ciocalteu's Phenol Reagent | Sigma-Aldrich | F9252 | |
Sodium Carbonate, Anhydrous | Sigma-Aldrich | S2127 | |
Sodium Acetate, Trihydrate | Sigma-Aldrich | S8625 | |
Calcium Acetate | Sigma-Aldrich | C1000 | |
L-Tyrosine, Free Base | Sigma-Aldrich | T3754 | |
Protease Profiler Kit | Sigma-Aldrich | PP0500 | |
Protease Fluorescent Detection Kit | Sigma-Aldrich | PF0100 |