AI Article Synopsis

  • Western blotting is a protein analysis technique that is slow, requires manual effort, and generally analyzes only one protein per assay, consuming significant sample amounts (10-20 μg).
  • New methods using microfluidics and capillary electrophoresis have been developed to enhance automation, throughput, and sensitivity, enabling the detection of multiple proteins simultaneously.
  • The improved method allows different antibodies to probe multiple protein tracks from a single sample injection, achieving high resolution and detection of 11 proteins from a mere 400 ng of total protein, eliminating the need for time-consuming stripping and reprobing.

Article Abstract

Western blotting is a commonly used protein assay that combines the selectivity of electrophoretic separation and immunoassay. The technique is limited by long time, manual operation with mediocre reproducibility, and large sample consumption, typically 10-20 μg per assay. Western blots are also usually used to measure only one protein per assay with an additional housekeeping protein for normalization. Measurement of multiple proteins is possible; however, it requires stripping membranes of antibody and then reprobing with a second antibody. Miniaturized alternatives to Western blot based on microfluidic or capillary electrophoresis have been developed that enable higher-throughput, automation, and greater mass sensitivity. In one approach, proteins are separated by electrophoresis on a microchip that is dragged along a polyvinylidene fluoride membrane so that as proteins exit the chip they are captured on the membrane for immunoassay. In this work, we improve this method to allow multiplexed protein detection. Multiple injections made from the same sample can be deposited in separate tracks so that each is probed with a different antibody. To further enhance multiplexing capability, the electrophoresis channel dimensions were optimized for resolution while keeping separation and blotting times to less than 8 min. Using a 15 μm deep × 50 μm wide × 8.6 cm long channel, it is possible to achieve baseline resolution of proteins that differ by 5% in molecular weight, e.g., ERK1 (44 kDa) from ERK2 (42 kDa). This resolution allows similar proteins detected by cross-reactive antibodies in a single track. We demonstrate detection of 11 proteins from 9 injections from a single Jurkat cell lysate sample consisting of 400 ng of total protein using this procedure. Thus, multiplexed Western blots are possible without cumbersome stripping and reprobing steps.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5113996PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.analchem.6b00705DOI Listing

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