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Gel electrophoresis (Southern, Northern, Western Blot), Hemoglobin Electrophoresis (HbC, Sickle cell disease) for USMLE Step 1

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by Alec Palmerton, MD in Cheat Sheet
USMLE Step 1 Electrophoresis

Here, we walk through a topic that confounds many medical students (particularly those distant from their basic sciences curriculum), gel electrophoresis,  and apply it in a USMLE Step 1-relevant manner to hemoglobin gel electrophoresis.

USMLE Step 1 Application Questions:

  1. What is the genetic mutation in HbC?  How will this affect the protein product?

  2. What is the genetic mutation in HbS?  How will this affect the protein product?

  3. Identify which is HbC and HbS in the following gel.  Using their underlying mutation, explain why:

USMLE Step 1 Electrophoresis

Basic questions:

USMLE Step 1 Gel Electrophoresis

Ready for the recall-type USMLE Step 1 questions?

What is the goal of gel electrophoresis?

Separate macromolecules (DNA/RNA, protein) based on SIZE / CHARGE

What is the role of SDS?

SDS (sodium dodecyl sulfate) will denature (unwind) proteins by binding to them. It is also highly negatively charged.

It is critical to unwind proteins, so that their length will be proportional to their size.

Protein_Denaturation_USMLE Step 1In this photo, you can see the paperclips in their native orientation (bottom left) and in their denatured, or “unwound” form (bottom right).  This is analogous to the process that proteins undergo when denatured in the presence of SDS.

Based on the charge on SDS, if the opposite end of the electrophoresis kit were positive, what direction would the macromolecules move?

SDS = anionic, thus molecules bound to it would move TOWARD a positive electrode.

What kinds of macromolecules would move the slowest toward the positive electrode?

Larger molecules (harder time moving through gel matrix), and ones with less negative charge would move slower towards the positive electrode

Southern blot – what molecules used?

DNA

Northern blot – what molecules used?

RNA

Western blot – what molecules used?

Protein

Hemoglobin electrophoresis – what kind of “blot” is it?

Western blot – hemoglobin is a protein

What is the genetic mutation in HbC? How will this affect the protein product?

Missense mutation (glutamate → lysine) → increased positive charge

Recall that glutamate = anion; Lysine = cation

What is the genetic mutation in HbS? How will this affect the protein product?

Missense mutation (glutamate → valine) → less negative charge

Recall that glutamate = anion; valine = neutral

Wait!

I strongly recommend that you attempt to answer the final questions by yourself first, before looking at the answers.  Remember, the USMLE Step 1 exam will test your ability to make connections on the spot. The more practice you have, the higher your score!  Then, when you think you might know the answer (or are completely stumped), look at the answers below!

USMLE Step 1 Electrophoresis

Ready for the answers?

Identify which is HbC and HbS in the following gel (above). Using their underlying mutation, explain why.

Patient 1 = Sickle Cell Disease hemoglobin (glutamate → valine mutation will ↓ negative charge → will move less towards positive electrode than control (from healthy patient) hemoglobin, which will have more negative charge.

Patient 2 = Hemoglobin C (glutamate → lysine mutation will ↑ positive charge → will move LEAST towards positive electrode)

What should you do next?

  1. Turn the narrative, “Pathogenesis to Presentation” questions into Anki cards by copy/pasting the question/answer into the “Front” and “Back” fields in Anki.  Do the same for the fundamental facts that you were unfamiliar with, to maximize your chances of USMLE Step 1 success!  Remember: the USMLE is a test of understanding, so the better you can understand these questions, the better your score!
  2. Add reverse cards when appropriate to your Anki cards
  3. Re-word the questions/explanations as desired, and BOLD the important text to make it easier to review in the future
  4. Learn something new?  Something unclear?  Comment below!
  5. If you liked this post, please consider sharing it on Facebook/Twitter!  I judge the utility of these posts by the number of comments / shares they receive, so if you’d like more, or would like a particular topic addressed, please let us know!

Photo by PlaxcoLab and Wikimedia Commons.

Want FREE Cardiology Flashcards?

Cardiology is key for impressive USMLE scores. Master cardiology from a Harvard-trained anesthesiologist who scored USMLE 270 with these 130+ high-yield flash cards. You’ll be begging for cardio questions - even if vitals make you queasy.

Subscribe