Title: IGP Methodology: Western Blotting and ELISA
1IGP Methodology Western Blotting (and ELISA)
- A.J. Robison
- Colbran and Winder Labs
- Dept. of Molecular Physiology Biophysics
- Oct. 27, 2005
- a.j.robison_at_vanderbilt.edu
2Western blotting
- Purpose Detect specific antigens (proteins)
recognized by polyclonal or monoclonal
antibodies - -Used after proteins separated on SDS-PAGE gel
- Uses
- 1. Qualitative
- Determine if a protein is present in a certain
cell type/tissue - Confirm protein expression in transformed or
transfected cells - 2. Quantitative
- Detect levels of a protein over time
- Detect protein levels in response to specific
treatment
3SDS-PAGE
- SDS Sodium Dodecyl Sulfate
- PAGE Polyacrylamide Gel Electrophoresis
- Separation of proteins, based on size and charge,
as they move through polyacrylamide gel matrix - Sample Preparation
- Boil sample in sample buffer prior to loading
- Sample buffer
- contains SDS, dye, and 2-Mercaptoethanol
- (reduces disulfide bonds)
Coomassie stained gel
4SDS-PAGE
- Separation of proteins, based on size as they
move through polyacrylamide gel matrix - of polyacrylamide in gel alters saparation
5Basic Steps of Western Blot
- Transfer gel to membrane
- ?
- Block
- ?
- Primary antibody
- ?
- wash
- ?
- Secondary antibody
- ?
- wash
- ?
- Detection
6ELISA Basic Steps
- Coat well with antibody
- ?
- wash
- ?
- Add antigen
- ?
- wash
- ?
- Enzyme-conjugated antibody
- ?
- wash
- ?
- Detection with substrate
Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent Assay
sandwich
7Transfer
- Transfer proteins separated by SDS-PAGE onto
membrane - membrane Nitrocellulose, polyvinylidene fluoride
(PVDF) - Purpose
- covalently attach proteins to membrane
- Membrane easier to handle than gel
- Proteins bound to surface of membrane, readily
accessible to antibodies
8Tank Transfer - advantages
- More efficient transfer of high molecular weight
proteins (gt100kDa) - Transfer overnight
- Can transfer multiple gels at same time with
equal efficiency - Can reuse some buffers in rig multiple times
9Semidry Transfer - advantages
- 1. Uses less buffer (100 mL or less)
- -Can transfer multiple gels at same time, though
with loss of efficiency - 2. Takes less time
- (10-30 minutes
- vs. gt1 hour for tank)
- Tip different methods of transfer have
different efficiencies - make sure to confirm
efficient transfer when using a new method for
the first time
10Protein Visualization
- Purpose Stain proteins on membrane to detect
transfer efficiency, equal protein loading - Can scan and use to normalize signal obtained by
western blot (good for accurate quantitation) - Fast Green, India ink, Ponceau S
11Blocking
- Purpose
- Fill any available protein-binding sites on blot
with nonreactive protein to prevent non-specific
antibody binding - Most common blocking agents
- nonfat dry milk, casein, bovine serum albumin,
serum (goat)
12Primary Antibody
- Purpose Use antibody that specifically
recognizes and binds to protein of interest - monoclonal (mouse) or polyclonal (rabbit, goat,
sheep, etc.) - Tip use positive and negative controls
Controls positive 1. purified protein of
interest 2. tissue known to contain protein
of interest negative 1. preincubate primary
antibody with antigen 2. tissue known to not
contain protein of interest
13First Wash
- Purpose Thoroughly wash away any unbound primary
antibody - Perform 5 5-minute washes using TTBS with
constant agitation on rocker or shaker
14Secondary Antibody
- Purpose
- (a) Binds to the primary antibody
- (b) Conjugated to enzyme (etc.) that provides
means of detection - Species specificity is important
- Must be specific for the IgG of the species from
which your primary antibody was generated - Ex goat anti-mouse, rabbit anti-goat, sheep
anti-rabbit - If primary antibody is goat anti-PoI, use an
anti-goat secondary
152 Antibody Conjugates
- Enzymes chromogenic, chemiluminescent
- Alkaline Phosphatase
- -Sharp bands
- -Control exposure in real time
- -cant strip membrane
- HRP/ECL
- -bands not as sharp
- -can strip/reprobe
- -make multiple exposures
- Infrared dyes
- -Expensive
- -can strip/reprobe
- -sharper bands than ECL
- Other Radiochemicals (125I-protein A),
Biotin/avidin, Colloidal gold,
Fluorescent compounds
16Second Wash
- Purpose
- Thoroughly wash away any unbound secondary
antibody - Performed the same as the first wash
- Notes about washes
- these can be highly variable - need to optimize
- Tip longer wash times or a greater number of
washes can help reduce background
Example high background
17Signal Detection
- Depends on type of secondary conjugate used
- ECL/HRP add reagents and expose to film
- Enzymes add substrate
- Dyes (fluorescent/infrared) expose to
fluorescent/infrared imager
18Stripping and reprobing
- Purpose of Stripping Blot
- To remove blocker, primary, and secondary
antibodies that bound during previous probe - Purpose of Reprobing Blot
- Detect same/different protein of interest on same
blot using a different antibody - Example use to quantitate phosphorylation
differences - Tip must test stripping efficiency
- Stripping will result in some loss of protein
from your blot (10-30) - Tip cannot strip some secondary antibodies
(such as Alk. Phos. conjugated)
19Controls for Western Blots
- Loading controls
- Positive controls (ex purified protein of
interest) - Negative controls (ex sample known to lack
protein of interest) - Detection Controls
- Preincubate primary antibody with saturating
amount of antigen - Controls for quantitation
- standard curve of purified protein
- TIP essential to ensure that signal
- is in dynamic range of detection
20Antibody Screening Prep Gels
- Advantages
- Same protein loading on all strips
- Vertical strips, screen
- different antibodies
- Find optimal antibody concentration
3mm wide strips
21Other Resources
- Current Protocols Online
- excellent resource for general techniques
- Current Protocols in Molecular Biology
- Chapter 10, Analysis of Proteins
- Section II Electrophoretic Separation of
Proteins - Section III Detection of Proteins
- Detailed protocols buffers / reagents
- Chapter 11, Immunology
- Unit 11.2 ELISA
- Website
- http//www.mrw.interscience.wiley.com/cp/cpmb/cpmb
_contents_fs.html
22- All following slides are for reference only, and
will not be discussed in class
23Tank Transfer Basic protocol
- 1. Cut membrane to size of gel, mark one side
with pencil for orientation - 2. Wet nitrocellulose in transfer buffer
- (PVDF first wet thoroughly in 100 methanol,
then wet in transfer buffer) - 3. Assemble transfer apparatus
- 4. Run at constant voltage 30-35V overnight
80-100V 1-4 hrs generally transfer performed in
4C cold room
24Tank Transfer Basic Protocol
- Uses 1-5 liters of buffer (Tris/Glycine buffer or
CAPS buffer) - Can transfer multiple gels at a time with equal
efficiency - Can reuse the buffer in rig multiple times
- Better for difficult-to-transfer proteins (gt100
kDa, hydrophobic) - More time intensive
25Semidry Transfer Basic Protocol
- Cut membrane to size of gel, mark one side with
pencil for orientation - Wet nitrocellulose in transfer buffer (PVDF,
first rinse in 100 methanol, then wet in
transfer buffer) - Assemble transfer apparatus
- Run at constant voltage 10-15V,10-30 min.
(maximum 1hr), room temp.
26Blocking Basic protocol
- Dissolve nonfat dry milk or BSA in TTBS (Tris
buffered saline with Tween-20) to give 2-10
solution - Immerse blot, put on rocker/shaker to provide
constant agitation for at least 1 hour at room
temperature - Can incubate overnight _at_ 4C if necessary
271 Antibody Basic protocol
- Blot can be cut into strips to probe with
multiple antibodies simultaneously - Ideal for detection of multiple proteins of
different molecular weights in same blot - Dilute antibody in TTBS or blocking buffer
- use appropriate dilution for each antibody (ex.
1500, 11000) - adding 1-5 milk may reduce background
- Primary antibodies usually expensive so to reduce
volume, put blots in heat-sealable bags incubate
room temp. 1-2hrs - Can incubate overnight _at_ 4C if necessary (best
for weak antibodies)
282 Antibody Basic protocol
- Dilute antibody in TTBS
- use appropriate dilution for each antibody (ex.
15,000 to 150,000) - can add 1 milk to reduce background
- Generally less expensive than primary antibody,
so use larger volumes incubate room temp. 45min.
- 1hr. - Tip Do not let this step go over 1hour
(will increase background)
29Detection
30Detection Enhanced chemiluminescence (ECL)
31Detection ECL - Basic protocol
- After final wash, pour out TTBS, put blot
protein-side-up on Saran Wrap on flat surface - Generally you will have 2 solutions
- 1. luminol (the substrate) and an enhancer (ex.
p-coumaric acid, p-iodophenol - 2. hydrogen peroxide -- mix these well, apply to
blot, incubate 1-5 minutes - Remove excess solution (dab blot on Whatman
paper) - Place protein-side-down on clean piece of Saran
Wrap, fold up, tape protein-side-up into gel
cassette, expose to film
32Detection ECL
- Tips
- When using a commerically available ECL kit, the
signal usually lasts longer than a homemade
recipe - Can also quantify signal from protein bands using
a Fluor-S-Max machine - Be sure to trace molecular weight standards on
film before removing blot from cassette
33Stripping and reprobing Basic protocol
- Stripping Buffer
- 100mM b-mercaptoethanol, 2 SDS, 62.5mM Tris-HCl
pH 6.8 - 1. Place membrane and stripping solution in
heat-sealable bag - 2. incubate at 50-70C for 30 minutes
- replace stripping buffer and incubate an
additional 30 minutes - rinse in TTBS