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A Western blot is a method in molecular
biology to detect a certain protein in a sample by using antibody specific to that protein. It also gives information about the size of that protein. Its name is a
pun off the name Southern blot, a similar technique developed earlier by
Ed Southern.
Steps in a Western blot
- The first step is gel electrophoresis.
The proteins of the sample are separated according to size on a gel, usually using SDS-PAGE. Usually the gel has several lanes so that several samples can be tested
simultaneously. However, it is also possible to use a 2-D gel
which spreads the proteins from a single sample out in two dimensions.
- Nitrocellulose transfer - The proteins in the gel are then transferred onto a membrane made of nitrocellulose or PVDF, by pressure or by
applying a current. This is the actual blotting process and is necessary in order to expose the proteins to antibody (see below).
The membrane is "sticky" and binds proteins non-specifically (i.e., binds all proteins equally well).
- Blocking - The membrane is then blocked, in order to prevent non-specific protein interactions
between the membrane and the antibody protein (next step, below). This is done by a solution of Bovine serum albumin
(BSA) or dry milk. (Without the blocking, the antibody to be applied in the next step would bind to the nitrocellulose.)
- The first antibody (often called the primary antibody) is incubated
with the membrane. This antibody recognizes only the protein of interest, and will not bind any of the other proteins on the
membrane. It is obtained by immunizing an animal (usually a rabbit or goat) with the protein of interest (i.e., injecting the protein into the animal's body) and
collecting the antibodies the animal produces against that protein. Some high affinity monoclonal antibodies can also be used for Western blots. An alternative to using an enzyme that is
coupled to the secondary antibody is to use a radioactive label. An antibody-binding protein such as Staphylococcus Protein A can be used and labeled with a radioactive
isotope of iodine.
- After rinsing to remove unbound primary antibody a secondary antibody is incubated with the membrane. It binds to
the first antibody, and is usually produced by a different animal. For example, goat anti-rabbit antibody might be used if the
first antibody was produced by rabbits. This secondary antibody is usually linked to an enzyme that can allow for visual identification of where on the membrane it has bound. As for to the ELISA procedure, the enzyme can be provided with a substrate molecule that will be converted by
the enzyme to a colored reaction product that will be visible on the membrane (see the figure below with blue bands).
Alternatively, the reaction product may produce enough fluorescence to
expose a sensitive sheet of film when it is placed against the membrane.
- Unbound secondary antibody is washed away, and the enzyme substrate is incubated with the membrane so that the position of
membrane-bound secondary antibody will become visible. If a radioactive label is used, the radioactive membrane can be placed
against a sheet of medical X-ray film. Bands corresponding to the detected protein of interest will appear as dark regions on the
developed film (see figure to right).
Since the first antibody only recognizes the protein of interest, and the second antibody only recognizes the first antibody,
if there is stain present on the membrane then the protein of interest must also be present on the membrane. Thus, the protein
bands on the membrane that are stained contain the protein that was to be detected, the other locations on the membrane do not.
Size approximations can be done by comparing the stained bands to that of a pre-stained protein size marker.
Picture of a Western blot with 5 vertical lanes
Usually, the gel is not completely devoid of proteins after blotting. Protein staining solution will show all protein bands on
the gel. The stained gel can then be compared with the stained membrane to identify which bands contain the wanted protein and
which do not.
In principle, one could bind the chemical signal directly to the first antibody, but production of the antibodies is easier if
the two functions recognition and signalling are separated.
Medical diagnostic applications
The HIV test known as "Western Blot" uses a variant of the technique, where the
goal is to detect the presence of antibody in a sample. Known HIV infected cells are opened
and their proteins separated and blotted on a membrane as above. Then the serum to be
tested is applied. Free antibody is washed away, and a secondary antibody is added that binds to human antibody and is linked to
an enzyme signal. The stained bands then indictate the proteins to which the patient's serum contains antibody.
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