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Non-specific Binding? Tips to Sharpen up Your Western Blot

Posted in: Protein Expression and Analysis
Image of a pencil sharpener to depict sharpening western blot image by handling non-specific binding

In the previous installment of this series on western blotting, we addressed potential sources of error when your final product is completely bare. But alternatively, what do you do when too much background is the problem? You may have beautiful bands of interest—but if there is a bunch of non-specific binding, your quantification and data reliability will suffer.

Let’s go through some ways to sharpen up your blot, in order of relative importance.

Blocking

This is the most important step of the blot—if you don’t block the unoccupied sites on the membrane, the antibodies will bind directly to the membrane. If you’re having trouble with non-specific binding, consider:

  • Increasing the blocking exposure time and/or temperature at which you block
  • Using a higher the protein concentration in your buffer
  • Adding 0.1% Tween to the buffer
  • Comparing with a different blocking buffer entirely

Washing

The whole purpose of washing is to clear the membrane of non-specific, weak interactions that eventually result in background noise. Over-washing can diminish the signal of interest, but this isn’t your problem if you have high background noise. Consider one or a mix of the following:

  • Opting for frequency (e.g. 5 rounds of 6 minutes instead of 3 rounds of 10)
  • Increasing the speed/vigor of the shaker, or washing for a greater amount of time.
  • Adding 0.1% Tween to your wash buffer.

Secondary Antibody and Imaging

Here’s where the signal is made—literally.

  • Don’t exceed the recommended incubation times, both for secondary antibody and your imaging agent!
  • Lower the concentration of your secondary antibody. 1:1000 dilution is pretty standard, but 1:5000 or even 1:10000 may be indicated.
  • Test the membrane (and substrate)—add your imaging substrate to an empty, non-treated membrane to ensure you get no signal when there is no secondary bound.
  • Experiment with different imaging protocols and contrast settings to find which can produce a clean signal with minimal exposure time. If you are using film, you may consider switching to an imager.

Primary Antibody

Too much, too little… just right?

  • Find the optimal concentration with a titration blot—using too much primary can lead to extraneous binding, and too little can lead to problems with no signal at all.
  • The primary antibody may just be of lower quality for your purposes, and another company’s (using a different epitope or purification method) may work better.

Sample and Gel Preparation

Samples that are too concentrated or are poorly denatured will not separate cleanly—this is important for the appearance of crisp bands.

  • Consider lowering the sample protein concentration
  • If this is not an option (due to a low abundance protein), be sure that you have an appropriate gel size
  • Try heating longer during prep or using different denaturing and/or reducing agents

Closing Considerations to Decrease Non-Specific Binding

When fine-tuning a protocol for a specific protein or antibody, it’s best to change only one thing at a time to isolate the problem. The list above is in order of importance, in order of likeliness to improve your blot immediately—start at the top and work down!

One last note: while background signal everywhere is a problem, non-specific bands are not always a mistake, especially if the same band is found consistently. If the right epitope is present, the primary antibody will bind—this may mean your protein has been covalently modified or digested by an innate protease (don’t forget your inhibitors), or it could be an alternatively spliced relative.

Until next time…

Hopefully, this article gave you some ideas that you can use when tweaking your western protocol.

In the next installment of this series, we’ll troubleshoot weird patterns, whether on your blot or total protein stain.

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4 Comments

  1. ryan H. on April 22, 2019 at 3:16 pm

    could i get your email address?

  2. Brandon Berry on April 2, 2016 at 7:55 pm

    I just learned the craziest method for making beautiful westerns, and when I say crazy I mean it. I had been having trouble for a few weeks, and an old pro in the lab showed me his method. Honestly, it seems like voodoo, but it really works every time. Before the TBST or PBST washes, you quickly squirt the blots with ddH2O and shake them around in it, then pour out the water. Repeat this 4-5 times. Then do the normal TBST wash cycles. Then before adding ECL he would wash the blots as I described, but then pat them dry with a kimwipe immediately before adding the ECL. I know it sounds like a terrible crazy method, but this guy’s blots (and now mine) look amazing. Maybe it only works for certain antibodies, but it really works so well. Crazy, right?

    • lum ambe on May 4, 2016 at 3:09 am

      wow,the washing with ddH2O is quite intruiging.I’m using DAB as my Revealing agent.pls do you think this modification can still be of importance?

    • ryan H. on April 22, 2019 at 2:34 pm

      could i get your email address?

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