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Topic: Importance of peptide purity in very dilute solution  (Read 2813 times)

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Offline jakeb

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Importance of peptide purity in very dilute solution
« on: June 27, 2012, 12:40:22 AM »
Let's say that you were to prepare two .5% solutions of a peptide. If you were to prepare one solution using 95% purity peptide and another solution using 98% purity peptide, the 95% purity solution would contain additional .0002% of impure peptides compared to the solution made with 98%.

To me, it seems very unlikely that this small increase would significantly alter the solution's biological activity, but I have been told that I'm not understanding it correctly. I'm curious to hear views from more people. Thanks very much!

Offline Extracted

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Re: Importance of peptide purity in very dilute solution
« Reply #1 on: June 27, 2012, 01:58:04 AM »
If the difference is 3%, and the impurity has no biological activity, you should see a difference of 3%.

Offline fledarmus

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Re: Importance of peptide purity in very dilute solution
« Reply #2 on: June 27, 2012, 08:47:16 AM »
I'm not sure exactly how your math worked. If you are trying to prepare a 0.5% solution, and the material that you started with was only 98% pure, then the solution you end up with should actually be a 0.49% solution of peptide with 0.01% impurity. If it was 95% pure, you get a 0.475% solution, with 0.025% added impurity. I see a difference of 0.015%, rather than 0.0002%. Am I missing something in your description?

Offline Babcock_Hall

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Re: Importance of peptide purity in very dilute solution
« Reply #3 on: June 27, 2012, 10:45:26 AM »
When dealing with enzymes, a 1% impurity can either be nothing to worry about or can completely mess things up.  If you mutate a key residue in an enzyme that knocks activity down by four orders of magnitude, but you have a 1% impurity of wild-type enzyme, your estimate of the effect of the mutation on rate will be in error by 100-fold.  The same impurity in a crystallization experiment would probably have no discernible effect.

I can think of two kinds of impurities in commercial peptides, namely small molecules left over from the process of making/cleaving/deprotecting it, and other peptides (for example shorter peptides created when the coupling of one amino acid did not go to 100% completion.  Small molecules can fluoresce, and this problem made one batch of peptide we bought near worthless in fluorescence-based titrations.  The other peptides might or might not have the same biological activity as the desired peptide.

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