Hi all,

I've run into a bit of a protein purification conundrum and wondered if
anyone had encountered a similar situation. I've exercised all of my
google-fu and can't find anything. It's a fairly straightforward setup;
His-tagged protein and Talon Co2+ resin, load lysate, wash with 5 mM
imidazole, elute with 150 mM imidazole. There is protein in the elution
fractions as would be expected. The strangeness occurs when I try to
regenerate the column. Using the standard protocol of 25 mM MES, 100 mM
NaCl pH 5 doesn't change the color of the resin back to light pink the way
it should with a regenerated column. I try stripping with the suggested
0.2M EDTA, still pink, 0.5M EDTA, still pink, 8 M urea plus 4% CHAPS and
then EDTA, still pink, 1 M NaOH then EDTA, still pink. I've checked the
resin using a Western (with a really specific monoclonal Ab) and it seems
that my protein has somehow irreversibly bound to the column and is
preventing the metal from releasing the sepharose. I've even tried
competing the protein off with excess Co2+ and Mg2+ (the endogenous
divalent bound cation).

Clearly the solution is swapping to a Ni column, but this is really bugging
me now. Has anyone run into this problem with IMAC before?

Background: The protein does bind divalent cations (Mg and Mn) with low
affinity (~1 mM) and has a ridiculous number of cysteines (10 in 416
residues total). There is 1 mM BME and 1 mM MgCl2 in all of the buffers.

Thanks,

Katherine

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