V3 workflow is a western blot procedure using stain-free gels. The stain-free technology allows researchers to visualize protein separation quality, to verify the transfer efficiency, and most importantly, to validate the change in the protein of interest using total protein quantification as a reliable loading control.
The western blot is a very useful and widely adopted lab technique, but its execution is challenging. The workflow is often characterized as a "black box" because an experimentalist does not know if it has been performed successfully until the last of several steps. Moreover, the quality of western blot data is sometimes challenged due to a lack of effective quality control tools in place throughout the western blotting process. Here we describe the V3 western workflow, which applies stain-free technology to address the major concerns associated with the traditional western blot protocol. This workflow allows researchers: 1) to run a gel in about 20-30 min; 2) to visualize sample separation quality within 5 min after the gel run; 3) to transfer proteins in 3-10 min; 4) to verify transfer efficiency quantitatively; and most importantly 5) to validate changes in the level of the protein of interest using total protein loading control. This novel approach eliminates the need of stripping and reprobing the blot for housekeeping proteins such as β-actin, β-tubulin, GAPDH, etc. The V3 stain-free workflow makes the western blot process faster, transparent, more quantitative and reliable.
Western blot is a very useful technique9, however, there are two major challenges with western blotting: long and labor intensive process and quality of data. A traditional protocol requires about 2 days. It involves many steps including sample preparation, gel casting, protein electrophoresis and transfer, membrane blocking followed by antibody incubation, imaging, and quite often stripping, reprobing, and finally data analysis. Throughout this process, there are no reliable and flexible tools for process control. As such, errors can be introduced at each step, and these errors have the potential to generate data artifacts; therefore, loading controls are essential in western blotting to identify and correct for the errors. The loading control is usually done by checking the protein level of a reference protein in each sample to see if it is equally presented. People often use housekeeping proteins, such as β-actin, β-tubulin, GAPDH, as loading control.
The quality of western blot data depends on reliable loading control. But there are two legitimate concerns when using housekeeping proteins for loading controls: 1) the antibody-based immunodetection of the housekeeping protein bands are often saturated and therefore one cannot distinguish the loading differences among the samples30; 2) the housekeeping protein expression level may vary in the samples under certain experimental conditions , for example, siRNA treatment, cell death, cell differentiation, etc.11,28,3,6,10,21. Due to these concerns, scientific journals are now requiring that "for quantitative comparisons, appropriate reagents, controls and imaging methods with linear signal ranges should be used" (Nature guideline). Similarly, editors from the Journal of Clinical Investigation are asking for more reliable loading controls24. For these reasons, a housekeeping protein needs to be validated in order to be used as loading control. First, one has to make sure it is measured in the linear dynamic range of the immunodetection method14,29. Second, one has to make sure it is expressed consistently in all samples26,31,25,19,20.
An alternative solution to a reliable loading control is to use total protein measurement from the blot. Some researchers have stained the blots with total protein stains, such as Coomassie, Flamingo Pink, Sypro Ruby, Amido Black, Ponceau S, and stain-free technology, to measure the total protein signal in each lane as loading control16,20,13,27,1,4,12. The total protein loading control avoids the pitfalls associated with housekeeping proteins. First, it is a true reflection of the amount of protein loaded for each sample. Second, the total protein stain exhibits excellent linear dynamic range in the common loading range for western blot analysis (10-50 μg protein of a complex cell lysate) and accurately differentiates the loading difference among the samples12.
Stain-free technology is a novel total protein staining method where a unique compound is mixed in acrylamide gel solution and evenly distributed in the casted gel. After electrophoresis is completed, the gel is exposed to UV light for a minimum of 1 min so that the stain compound reacts with the tryptophan residues in the protein. The proteins become excitable under UV light to give a strong fluorescent signal that can be visualized and quantified in a stain-free enabled imager such as the ChemiDoc MP system. The stain-free compound itself, however, does not absorb UV light, resulting in low background of the gel image. The modification of the tryptophan residues is irreversible and proteins can be visualized not only in the gel but also on the blot at any time after protein transfer.
The stain-free technology is applied in the V3 Western Workflow (Figure 1) to address the major complaints about the traditional workflow, especially the concerns with using housekeeping proteins as loading controls. Using this workflow, one could: 1) run a gel in about 20-30 min, 2) check sample integrity and protein separation quality in 5 min after gel run; 3) transfer proteins in 3-10 min; 4) check the transfer efficiency quantitatively; and 5) most importantly, validate changes in the level of the protein of interest using total protein loading control.
1. Protein Sample Prep
(A typical procedure to extract proteins from cell culture is described)
2. Gel Electrophoresis with Stain-free Gels (~30 min)
3. Stain-free Gel Imaging Using the Chemidoc MP System to Check Protein Separation Quality (~5 min)
4. Protein Transfer with the Trans-Blot Turbo System (~10 min)
5. Stain-free Gel and Blot Imaging Using the Chemidoc MP System to Check Protein Transfer Efficiency and Quality (~5 min)
6. Antibody Incubation
7. Imaging and Data Analysis by Image Lab Software- Total Protein Normalization (~5 min)
1. Assessment of sample integrity, protein separation quality, and transfer efficiency with stain-free gel images.
Protein extract from HeLa cells were separated at 300 V for 20 min on a 18-well Criterion AnyKD TGX stain-free gel. The protein samples were loaded 3x at four different amounts (Lanes 1-3, 40 μg; Lanes 4-6, 30 μg; Lanes 7-9, 20 μg; Lanes 10-12, 10 μg). The gel was activated under UV light for 1 min. Figure 2A shows the gel image acquired right after the protein separation. Protein sample integrity (e.g. degradation) and separation quality (e.g. protein precipitation) can be visually assessed with this gel image. Proteins were then transferred for 7 min to a nitrocellulose membrane using Trans-Blot Turbo. Figure 2B shows the stain-free image of the post-transfer gel. Both images were acquired with the same exposure time (6.8 sec). Lane 3 and 12 were selected to measure the transfer efficiency. Using the volume tool in the Image Lab software, a rectangular box (blue) was drew to cover lane 3 and 12 on both gel images. The calculation based on the volume values from these boxes indicated that transfer efficiency of both lanes was 80% (Figure 2C). In this experiment, the AnyKD TGX gel was selected to study small to medium size target proteins and it was not optimized for the transfer of large proteins. Optimizing the transfer efficiency would require the use of lower percentage gel (e.g. 4-20%) and/or an adjustment of the transfer time to facilitate the transfer of large proteins. 2. Stain-free total protein loading control is a reliable alternative to housekeeping loading control in western blotting to quantify a small change in the level of protein of interest.
MCM-7 is a DNA licensing replication factor the level of which decreases by 20-50% in Lymphoblastoid cell lines (LCL) after irradiation treatment. In this experiment, lysates (30 μg each) of four control and irradiation-treated Lymphoblastoid cell line (LCL) cultures were separated on a 12-well Criterion AnyKD TGX stain-free gel. The gel was activated for 1 min under UV light and transferred by Trans-Blot Turbo to a PVDF membrane for immunoblotting. The housekeeping protein GAPDH (green) was probed with a rabbit antibody (Cell Signaling Technology, USA, 1:2,500) and a Dylight 549 conjugated Goat-anti-rabbit antibody (Rockland, USA, 1:20,000). The protein of interest MCM-7 (red) was probed using a mouse antibody (Abcam, USA, 1:1,000) and a Dylight 649 conjugated Goat-anti-mouse antibody (Rockland, 1:10,000).
Figure 3A shows a multiplex fluorescent image of total proteins (blue), MCM-7 (red) and GAPDH (green) detected in four control and irradiation treated LCL samples. Figure 3B is a stain-free image of the same blot showing the total protein patterns in each sample (30 μg). Image lab software selected the sample lanes (blue boxes) to measure MCM-7, GAPDH, and total protein volume in each lane. The MCM-7 levels were normalized either against the stain-free total protein measurement or against GAPDH. The normalized MCM-7 protein levels were statistically analyzed and the average MCM-7 protein band volume and standard deviation (n=4) are presented in the chart (Figure 3C). Both normalization methods revealed a small decrease (about 25%) in MCM-7 protein levels after irradiation treatment. The data with the total protein normalization exhibited a smaller standard deviation than that with GAPDH as the loading control.
Figure 1. V3 Western Workflow. The V3 workflow is depicted in the left column in 4 steps. The major instruments and reagents used in the workflow are shown at each step. The estimated time for each step is also included. The right column shows that a minimum of 4 images can be generated in the V3 workflow. The use of each piece of data is described. The stain-free images of the pretransfer gel, post-transfer gel, and the blot (A, B, C) can not be generated easily with traditional western blotting techniques; These images and data provide important information and checkpoints along the procedure to improve the scientist's control and reproducibility of western blot workflow. The target protein signals can be captured either on a chemiluminescent blot image (D) if a HRP-conjugated secondary antibody was applied in detection or on a fluorescent blot image (E) if multiplexing fluorescent western blotting was performed to detect more than one target protein simultaneously on the same blot.
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Figure 2. Stain-free images of pretransfer and post-transfer gels in the V3 western workflow to assess sample integrity, separation quality, and transfer efficiency. (A) Pretransfer gel stain-free image. (B) Post-transfer gel stain-free image. (C) Protein transfer efficiency measurement.
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Figure 3. Comparing stain-free total protein measurement to GAPDH immunodetection as loading controls to normalize the level of protein of interest. (A) Fluorescent western blot image. (B) Stain-free blot image. (C) Normalized MCM-7 protein levels.
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The V3 stain-free protocol described above is for multiplexing fluorescent western blotting. It can also be applied in western blotting using chemiluminescent detection. In the multiplex fluorescent western blot protocol, the stain-free blot images are acquired at two time points: 1) right after protein transfer; 2) at the multiplex fluorescent imaging step after antibody incubation. The first stain free image is used to calculate transfer efficiency and the second stain-free image is used as the loading control. When the chemiluminescent method is applied, it is not possible to take a multiplex image for the stain-free and target protein signals, because the chemiluminescent signal will show up in the stain-free channel too. In this case, we recommend to use the stain-free image taken right after the protein transfer step for loading control and normalization analysis.
The V3 western workflow provides the following unique benefits compared to the traditional western blot workflow that uses housekeeping proteins as loading controls:
First, the V3 workflow provides a practical, convenient and more reliable loading control to validate the changes in the level of the protein of interest. The V3 protocol uses a total protein loading control to normalize the level of the protein of interest measured in each sample. It avoids two pitfalls of using the housekeeping proteins as loading controls: saturated immunodetection and inconsistent housekeeping protein expression levels among the samples under certain experimental conditions. Stripping and reprobing steps with antibodies directed against housekeeping are no longer necessary. Using stain-free technology, there is no need to stain and de-stain a blot with stains such as Coomassie or Sypro Ruby for total protein measurement. It takes just a few seconds to acquire a blot image and about 5 min to do total protein normalization using Image Lab software.
Second, the V3 workflow allows scientists to take better control of the western procedure because it makes the procedure more transparent and introduces several checkpoints for quality control. With the help of stain-free technology, researchers can visualize their protein samples on both the gel and the blot. Scientists can assess protein sample integrity (degraded or not), separation quality (precipitated or not), transfer efficiency and transfer quality (even transfer or not). These checkpoints help researches terminate the experiment when seeing big flaws in the process and avoid wasting time on poor samples and blots. This technology also helps scientists assess whether there is a significant amount of protein loss after membrane stripping and whether the blot is suitable for reprobing a different target 4.
Here are a few tips to ensure good experience and quality data using V3 western workflow.
It is important to note that the stain-free molecule after UV-activation is irreversibly bound to tryptophan residues. This irreversible modification may potentially affect antigen recognition when using monoclonal antibodies if the epitope contains tryptophan. Polyclonal antibodies are unlikely to be affected because they recognize multiple epitopes on the antigen. Unbound stain-free molecules are easily washed off the gel and the membrane and therefore will not interfere with antibody-antigen interactions.
In conclusion, the V3 western workflow makes the western blot process faster, more transparent, quantitative and more reliable. Researchers now can easily apply total protein loading control in a western blot experiment to make their data more trustworthy. The V3 stain-free workflow has been adopted by a number of labs, and their publications have demonstrated that journals accept stain-free data as loading control in western blot22,17,7,8,5,23,18,15.
The authors have nothing to disclose.
The authors thank Dr. Wolf-Dieter Stalz, Dr. Arnaud Remy, Dr. Anton Posch, Dr. Patricia Piatti, Tom Davies, Kris Simonyi, and Jeff Durban for their critical review and editing of this manuscript. The authors also thank Allison Schwartz for technical support.
REAGENTS | |||
4-20% Criterion TGX Stain-Free Precast Gel | Bio-Rad | 567-8093 | Choose a gel size and percentage that meet the specific need in a experiment |
Trans-Blot Turbo Midi PVDF Transfer Packs | Bio-Rad | 170-4157 | Choose either PVDF or nitrocellulose and match the membrane size to the gel size |
Clarity Western ECL Substrate, 500 ml | Bio-Rad | 170-5061 | |
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EQUIPMENT | |||
Criterion Cell | Bio-Rad | 165-6100 | |
Trans-Blot Turbo Transfer Starter System | Bio-Rad | 170-4155 | |
ChemiDoc MP System | Bio-Rad | 170-8280 |