Caspases,Paracaspases, and Metacaspases Methods and Protocols

(Wang) #1

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and techniques are mastered, the full characterization (titration
and kinetic parameter determination) can be accomplished in less
than a day.

The determination of enzyme velocity requires that experimental
values be represented in molar amount of product generated per
unit of time (e.g., μM/s or nM/s). Therefore, the relationship
between relative fluorescence units (RFU) given as readouts from
the plate reader and the actual concentration of product must be
determined. The conversion factor varies greatly between instru-
ments and system settings for the same instrument. It also varies
over time for the same instrument and settings. For instance,
instruments that use a lamp for excitation will, over the lifetime of
the lamp, display a decreased performance. Therefore, an accurate
velocity measurement requires frequent determination of the rela-
tionship between RFU and the corresponding molar amount of
product. To this end, one must first make a standard fluorophore
solution. This solution is used to calibrate the spectrofluorometer.
In a similar fashion to the Afc standard, the substrate must also
be calibrated. Indeed, the purity of commercially available fluoro-
genic substrates varies among providers and from lot to lot within the
same manufacturer. A simple way to obtain accurate and reproduc-
ible values using commercial substrates is to calibrate them following
the complete hydrolysis of a fixed amount of substrate. This process
ensures that the concentration of “usable” substrate is determined.
To produce reliable and reproducible data, important technical
considerations must be taken into account. First, it is critical to
use the same brand and model of plates for calibration of the plate
reader and enzymatic assays. This requirement arises because the
plate used significantly influences the relationship between the flu-
orescence readout and the actual concentration of the fluorophore.
It is also critical that the instrument settings used to calibrate the
plate reader are exactly the same as the ones used for all enzymatic
assays. Otherwise, the conversion of fluorescence readout into
molar concentration of product will no longer stand. Consequently,
it is recommended to generate several datasets of calibration for
every group of settings that will be used. If available, softwares or
instrument programs, templates or methods are useful to save the
instrument parameters.

This procedure takes 1 h to be completed.


  1. Weigh a small amount of Afc and prepare a 10 mM solution in
    DMSO.

  2. Using the stock solution, prepare 1 mL of 50 μM Afc solution
    in water.

  3. Measure the absorbance of the diluted Afc solution at 380 nm
    in a 1 cm path quartz cuvette. Determine the actual concentra-
    tion of Afc using the molar extinction coefficient (ε) of Afc


3.2.1 Substrate and
Plate Reader Calibration


Standard Afc Solution


Dave Boucher et al.

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