Biuret Protein Assay
Considerations for use
The principle of the biuret assay
is similar to that of the Lowry, however it involves
a single incubation of 20 min. There are very
few interfering agents (ammonium salts being
one such agent), and Layne (1957) reported fewer
deviations than with the Lowry or ultraviolet
absorption methods. However, the biuret assay
consumes much more material. The biuret is a
good general protein assay for batches of material
for which yield is not a problem. The Bradford
assay is faster and more sensitive.
Principle
Under alkaline conditions substances
containing two or more peptide bonds form a purple
complex with copper salts in the reagent.
Equipment
In addition to standard liquid
handling supplies a visible light spectrophotometer
is needed, with maximum transmission in the region
of 450 nm. Glass or polystyrene (cheap) cuvettes
may be used.
Procedure
Reagent
A formula for biuret reagent is
(per liter final volume) 9 gm Sodium potassium
tartrate (f.w. 282.22), 3 gm Copper sulfate x 5
H2O (f.w. 249.68), 5 gm Potassium iodide (166.0),
all dissolved in order in 400 ml 0.2 M
NaOH (f.w. 40.0) before bringing to final volume.
The volume can be scaled up or scaled down of
course. Discard if a black precipitate forms.
Assay
- Volumes sample, reagent can be scaled
up/down and/or volume ratios varied, as with
any assay.
- Warm up the spectrophotometer 15 min.
before use.
- Prepare standards from bovine
serum albumin, preferably calibrated using
absorbance at 280 nm and the extinction coefficient.
Using 5 ml color reagent to 1 ml sample
a recommended range is 0.5 to 20 mg protein.
- Prepare a reference tube with 1 ml buffer.
- If possible, dilute
unknowns to an estimated 1 to 10 mg/ml
with buffer; a range of dilutions should
be used if the actual concentration cannot
be estimated.
- Use 1 ml sample per assay
tube
- Add 9 ml Biuret reagent to each tube,
vortex immediately, and let stand 20 min.
- Read at 550 nm.
Analysis
Prepare a standard curve of absorbance
versus micrograms protein (or vice versa),
and determine amounts from the curve. Determine
concentrations of original samples from the amount
protein, volume/sample, and dilution factor,
if any.
Comments
The color is stable, but all
readings should be taken within 10 min. of each
other. As with most assays, the Biuret can be
scaled down for smaller cuvette sizes, consuming
less protein. Proteins with an abnormally high
or low percentage of amino acids with aromatic
side groups will give high or low readings, respectively.
For Bovine serum albumin we
typically obtain a linear relationship between
absorbance and amount protein over a range
of 0.5 to 20 mg protein. The assay has not
been reliable for amounts below 0.5 mg, however
the actual sensitive range may extend beyond
the upper limit.
References
- Gornall, AG, CS Bardawill, and MM David. J.
Biol. Chem. 177: 751. 1949.
- Layne, E. Spectrophotometric and Turbidimetric
Methods for Measuring Proteins. Methods
in Enzymology 10: 447-455. 1957.
- Robinson, HW and CG Hogden. J. Biol.
Chem. 135: 707. 1940.
- Slater, RJ (ed.). Experiments in Molecular
Biology. Clifton, New Jersey: Humana
Press, 1986. P. 269.
- Weichselbaum, TE. Am. J. Clin. Pathol.
Suppl. 10: 40. 1946.
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