Skip to Content
MilliporeSigma
HomeProtein PurificationPurification of Histidine-Tagged Recombinant Proteins Using Ni Sepharose® High Performance

Purification of Histidine-Tagged Recombinant Proteins Using Ni Sepharose® High Performance

Ni Sepharose High Performance consists of highly cross-linked 6% agarose beads (34 µM) to which a chelating group has been immobilized and subsequently charged with Ni2+ ions. The chromatography medium provides very high binding capacity for histidine-tagged proteins and shows negligible leakage of Ni2+ ions.

Ni Sepharose High Performance is compatible with all commonly used aqueous buffers, reducing  agents, and denaturants such as 6 M Gua-HCl and 8 M urea, as well as a range of other additives, and allows thorough procedures for cleaning the medium (Characteristics of Ni Sepharose, Ni Sepharose excel, TALON Superflow, and uncharged IMAC Sepharose products). It is stable over a broad pH range. This high chemical and physical stability and broad compatibility allows maintenance of biological activity and increases the yield of the purified product.

The good flow properties and high resolution make Ni Sepharose High Performance the choice for high-performance purifications for the main characteristics of Ni Sepharose High Performance.

Ni Sepharose High Performance is supplied preswollen in 20% ethanol, in pack sizes of 25 and 100 mL, as well as in the convenient prepacked formats described later in this chapter.

Ni Sepharose High Performance

Figure 1.Ni Sepharose High Performance precharged with Ni2+ for high-performance purification of histidine-tagged proteins.

Column packing

View Column packing and preparation for general guidelines for column packing.

Sample preparation

This sample preparation procedure is applicable for all formats containing Ni Sepharose High Performance (Cell Lysis).

Adjust the sample to the composition and pH of the binding buffer by adding buffer, NaCl, imidazole, and additives from concentrated stock solutions; by diluting the sample with binding buffer; or by buffer exchange. To prevent the binding of host cell proteins with exposed histidines, it is essential to include imidazole at a low concentration in the sample and binding buffer (Optimizing purification of histidine-tagged proteins).

Pass the sample through a 0.22 µM or a 0.45 µM filter and/or centrifuge it immediately before sample application. Filtration is not necessary when using His MultiTrap HP. If the sample is too viscous, dilute it with binding buffer to prevent it from clogging; increase lysis treatment (sonication, homogenization); or add DNase/RNase to reduce the size of nucleic acid fragments.

Buffer preparation

Binding buffer: 20 mM sodium phosphate, 0.5 M NaCl, 20 to 40 mM imidazole, pH 7.4. (The optimal imidazole concentration is protein dependent; 20 to 40 mM is suitable for many proteins.)

Elution buffer: 20 mM sodium phosphate, 0.5 M NaCl, 500 mM imidazole, pH 7.4.

Water and chemicals used for buffer preparation should be of high purity. Filter buffers through a 0.45 µM filter before use. Use high-purity imidazole, as this will give a very low or no absorbance at 280 nm.

The optimal concentration of imidazole needed in the sample and buffer to obtain the best purity and yield differs from protein to protein. In the binding buffer, 20 to 40 mM imidazole is suitable for many proteins; 500 mM imidazole in the elution buffer ensures complete elution of the target protein.

As an alternative to elution with imidazole, lower the pH to approximately pH 4.5. (Metal ions will be stripped off the medium below pH 4.0.)

Purification

  1. If the column contains 20% ethanol, wash it with 5 column volumes of distilled water. Use a flow velocity of 50 to 100 cm/h. Refer to Converting from flow velocity to volumetric flow rates for flow rate calculations.
  2. Equilibrate the column with 5 to 10 column volumes of binding buffer at a flow velocity of 150 cm/h.
  3. Apply the pretreated sample.
  4. Wash with binding buffer until the absorbance reaches the baseline.
  5. Elute with elution buffer using a step or linear gradient.
    1. For step elution, 5 column volumes of elution buffer are usually sufficient.
    2. For linear gradient elution, a shallow gradient, over 20 column volumes, may separate proteins with similar binding strengths.
  6. After elution, regenerate the column by washing it with 5 to 10 column volumes of binding buffer. The column is now ready for a new purification.

The column does not need to be stripped and recharged between each purification if the same protein is going to be purified. Reuse of any purification column depends on the nature of the sample and should only be performed with identical proteins to prevent cross-contamination. For more information on this topic and on cleaning and storage, refer to Characteristics of Ni Sepharose, Ni Sepharose excel, TALON Superflow, and uncharged IMAC Sepharose products.

Use the elution buffer as blank when measuring absorbance manually. If imidazole needs to be removed from the protein, use a desalting column (Desalting/buffer exchange and concentration). Low-quality imidazole will give a significant background absorbance at 280 nm.

Ni Sepharose High Performance is compatible with reducing agents. However, we recommend removal of any weakly bound Ni2+ ions before applying buffer/sample that includes reducing agents. This can be accomplished by performing a blank run without reducing agents (see below). Do not leave or store Ni Sepharose High Performance with buffers that include reducing agents.

Leakage of Ni2+ from Ni Sepharose High Performance is low under all normal conditions. For very critical applications, leakage during purification can be even further diminished by performing a blank run (as described below) before loading sample.

Blank run:

  1. Use binding buffer and elution buffer without reducing agents.
  2. Wash the column with 5 column volumes of distilled water (to remove the 20% ethanol).
  3. Wash with 5 column volumes of elution buffer.
  4. Equilibrate with 10 column volumes of binding buffer.
Materials
Loading
Sign In To Continue

To continue reading please sign in or create an account.

Don't Have An Account?