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Characterizing protein stability, powerful approaches to study protein denaturation

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8 How it works DSF exploits one of the SYPRO dye's properties: that it doesn't fluoresce in aqueous solutions, but it activates in hydrophobic environments. In a DSF experiment, an unfolding protein exposes hydrophobic patches that the SYPRO dye binds to, resulting in increased fluorescence. Once the unfolded protein starts to aggregate, the dye is displaced and the fluorescence decreases again. Strengths This is an inexpensive method that is relatively easy to use and is suitable for high-throughput screening. Weaknesses This method harbors several disadvantages. First, only a limited amount of thermal stability information is collected (Typicallyt only one Tm is determined), so it's not an ideal approach for large proteins such as monoclonal antibodies that have multiple Tm. Also, because the SYPRO dye interacts directly with the protein, it likely alters its unfolding behavior by promoting transitions into the unfolded state. In general, scientists who are looking to mimic physiological conditions as close as possible prefer to use label-free methods to limit the potential confounding influence of fluorescent probe binding on protein properties. In addition, DSF is incompatible with a number of common excipients, especially surfactants such as PS20 and similar vehicles. Conclusion DSF/thermofluor is an inexpensive, easy-to-use method for the high-throughput screening of small molecule interactions, but because of its limitations in detecting multiple unfolding events and large proteins, it's not the ideal choice for many large molecule biologics development workflows. Differential scanning fluorimetry (DSF) is a general description for a group of thermal stability assays that use a solvatochromic dye, or a dye that changes color due to a change in solvent polarity (SYPRO Orange is the most commonly used dye). Assays are typically performed using a qPCR instrument, a tool that is present in many molecular biology research facilities. Note that most people prefer to call the technique by its original trademark name, Thermofluor. Differential Scanning Fluorimetry

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