BCA Assay
The BCA Assay is a detergent-compatible, biochemical assay that quantifies protein concentration by measuring the color change of bicinchoninic acid from blue to purple.
The bicinchoninic acid (BCA) protein assay quantifies protein concentration in solution (20 µg / mL to 2000 µg / mL). Like the Lowry protein assay and Bradford protein assay, it is a colorimetric method; it observes the color change of BCA from blue to purple. This shift is directly proportional to the amount of protein and can be measured using absorbance at 562 nm.
Principle and mechanism
Originally invented by Paul Smith at the Pierce Chemical Company, the BCA assay involves a two-step detection process. The first is a Biuret reaction, in which Cu2+ ions are reduced to Cu+ ions, in an alkaline environment, through the formation of chelate complexes with amino acid residues (cysteine, tyrosine and tryptophan). In the second step, BCA reacts with the cuprous ions produced in step one, forming a water soluble complex with a strong absorbance at 562 nm. This absorbance can be quantified using a microplate reader or other absorbance spectrophotometer, and it is directly proportional to the protein concentration in solution.Bradford Assay vs BCA
While similar to the Bradford assay, the BCA assay has several key differences. Firstly, it has a broader detection range than the Bradford assay. Second, compared to the Bradford assay, the BCA assay is less sensitive to the specific protein composition of the sample being tested. This is because the peptide backbone, in addition to specific residues, contributes to the final absorbance reading.A list of additional differences is summarized in the table below:
Bradford Assay | BCA Assay | |
Assay Range (µg / mL) | 10 to 50 (10 to 500 if using ratiometric method) | 20 to 2000 |
Principle | Coomassie Brilliant Blue-protein complex formation | Copper ion reduction and BCA-Cu+ complex formation |
Absorbance (nm) | 595 | 562 |
Detergent compatibility | Low | High |
Protein residues influenced by | arginine, lysine, histidine | cysteine, tyrosine, tryptophan |
Micro BCA vs BCA
While both assays use BCA (bicinchoninic acid) to measure protein concentration of dilute protein samples, the Micro BCA assay is designed for testing proteins in lower sample concentrations of 0.5-20 µg / mL, while the standard BCA assay works in the range of 20 - 2000 µg / mL.BCA assay protocol
Quick summary
- Prepare BCA working solution (50 µL)
- Add BSA standards or test samples (50 µL)
- Incubate at room temperature for 20 - 60 minutes
- Read absorbance at 562 nm (in the range of 540-590 nm)
Full protocol
Alternative formats
Citations
View all 1 citations: Citation Explorer
Increased alcohol dehydrogenase 1 activity promotes longevity
Authors: Ghaddar, Abbas and Mony, Vinod K and Mishra, Swarup and Berhanu, Samuel and Johnson, James C and Enriquez-Hesles, Elisa and Harrison, Emma and Patel, Aaroh and Horak, Mary Kate and Smith, Jeffrey S and others,
Journal: Current Biology (2023)
Authors: Ghaddar, Abbas and Mony, Vinod K and Mishra, Swarup and Berhanu, Samuel and Johnson, James C and Enriquez-Hesles, Elisa and Harrison, Emma and Patel, Aaroh and Horak, Mary Kate and Smith, Jeffrey S and others,
Journal: Current Biology (2023)
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Journal: Electrophoresis (2014): 1887-92
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