2017年3月22日星期三

Tagged Peptides

Tagging peptides with affinity tags such as biotin is a frequently used strategy in life sciences research. Affinity tags are used for detection of suitably tagged peptides (e.g. with antibodies) or for the separation of tagged peptides from untagged ones.

The tags can be small organic molecules, like biotin (which binds strongly and non-covalently to streptavidin) or a short peptide sequence. The most prominent examples thereof are epitope tags (like the Flag tag, the HA tag, the His tag and the Myc tag), for each of which antibodies are commercially available. The respective sequences are presented in the table below.

Pepmic routinely applies the various tags in the synthesis of tagged peptides. The tags are usually attached at the N-terminus or the C-terminus (via lysine or cysteine), but in principle can be positioned anywhere. If so required, the tags can be separated from the peptide via a spacer. A variety of different so called linkers or spacer molecules of varying length and polarity are available. The linkers can also be made cleavable, e.g. by reduction of sensitive disulfide bonds
Tag
Sequence
Detection
Flag tag
DYKDDDDK
Anti-flag antibody
HA tag
YPYDVPDYA
Anti-HA antibody
Myc tag
EQKLISEEDL
Anti-Myc antibody
His tag
HHHHHH
Anti-His antibody

Eva He
eva@pepmic.com
Pepmic Co., Ltd
www.pepmic.com

没有评论:

发表评论