Sorry, I am inexperienced in biochemical techniques. I am currently examining the allergen phl p 5 from timothy grass, and have been having a hard time gathering information (due to a lack of access to papers). If I were to go try an acid, I am worried about the lack of recovery of the protein after dissolving it in solution. Unfortunately, I have to retrieve the protein post analysis and using a straight up acid would be problematic on my rotovap. I was thinking about doing a mixture of 10% TCA in acetone. Any thoughts?
You cannot treat protein samples as you would most chemical substances you encounter in a chemistry lab. Proteins are extremely sensitive to the conditions under which you place them. Proteins almost always should be in aqueous solution, and small amounts of organic solvent will often denature them and destroy their activity. In addition, not any aqueous solution will work, most proteins require a fairly narrow set of temperature, pH, salt concentrations in order to maintain their activity.
Thus, trying to rotovap your sample is a bad idea for a number of reasons. First, you don't want your protein to be in any of the typical solvents removed by a rotovap (e.g. acetone). Second, heating proteins is generally a bad idea. If you want to recover your protein in solid form, lyophilization is a much better approach.
Here is a document with some tips for handling protein samples. It's not entirely comprehensive, but it has some good pointers if you have little biochemistry experience:
http://stanxterm.aecom.yu.edu/wiki/index.php?page=Protein_handlingIn addition, consulting the published literature to see under what conditions others store and use the protein is a must. Remember the old addage: a day in the library can save you a week in the lab.