17
(ε 380 nm = 12,600 M−1 cm−1). A 50 μM solution of pure Afc has
an absorbance of 0.630 at 380 nm (see Note 19).
- Correct the initial concentration of Afc accordingly. This is the
standard Afc solution. Afc solution is stable for at least 1 year at
−20 °C.
This procedure takes 1 h to be completed.
- Using the standard solution of fluorophore (step 4,
Subheading 3.2.1.1), set up a series of 100 μL Afc samples in a
microplate in 1× caspase buffer to cover a concentration range
between 1 and 100 μM (15 samples). Plan more samples in the
1–10 μM range than in the higher range. Include a buffer-only
sample (see Note 20). - Read the fluorescence at EXλ = 405 nm and EMλ = 510 nm for
every setting of the instrument that will be used (e.g., various
values of gain, wavelength bandwidth, flashes, integration time). - Plot the fluorescence of each sample against the Afc concentra-
tion and determine the slope of the straight portion of the
trace by linear regression. The slope describes the relationship
between RFU and Afc concentration. - Repeat the procedure regularly (see Note 21).
This procedure takes 2 h to be completed.
- Based on the amount indicated on the product label, dissolve
a vial of substrate in DMSO to obtain a final concentration of
30 mM. - Set up a 1 mL caspase reaction containing 50 μM Afc-based
substrate in 1× executioner caspase buffer and add excess puri-
fied recombinant caspase-3 (100 nM) to completely hydrolyze
the available substrate. Set up another sample without caspase.
Incubate for 1 h at 37 °C in the dark (see Note 22). - Measure the absorbance of the reaction at 380 nm in a 1 cm
path quartz cuvette. Use the caspase-free sample as a blank.
Determine the actual concentration of “usable” substrate
using the molar extinction coefficient (ε) of Afc
(ε380 nm = 12,600 M−1 cm−1) (see Notes 19 and 23 ). - Correct the initial concentration of Afc-based substrate accord-
ingly. Fluorogenic substrate solutions are stable for at least
1 year at −20 °C.
The goal of active site titration is to determine the molar amount
of active sites in an enzyme preparation. Too often, enzymes (even
caspases) are provided as unit amount, for example, restriction
enzymes used in molecular cloning. Although this approach is sat-
isfactory because enzymes are often used to perform a certain
quantity of work (e.g., cleaving 10 μg of plasmid DNA) and
Plate Reader Calibration
Fluorogenic Substrate
Calibration
3.2.2 Caspase Active
Site Titration
Apoptotic Caspases Assays