Loading Control Antibodies
Loading Control Antibodies
High Performing Loading Control Antibodies
Figure 2. Western blot analysis of extracts of various cell lines, using HRP-Conjugated-Beta-Tubulin antibody (CABC030) at 1:10000 dilution. Secondary antibody: HRP Goat Anti-Mouse IgG (H+L) (CABS003) at 1:10000 dilution. Lysates/proteins: 25ug per lane. Blocking buffer: 3% nonfat dry milk in TBST. Detection: ECL Basic Kit. Exposure time: 1s.
What are Loading Controls?
A loading control is a protein which is ubiquitously expressed in the cell. Loading controls are used as a reference for calculating the concentration of a protein of interest in a sample.
A loading control antibody is an antibody with reactivity against a loading control protein. Loading control antibodies are used for the normalization of results in western blot experiments and to establish the concentration of a protein/proteins in a sample.
Popular Loading Control Antibodies
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Types of Loading Controls
Popular loading controls used may be housekeeping gene proteins or other proteins that are expressed constitutively across all cell types. Loading controls are proteins that are highly conserved, highly expressed, and stable under most experimental conditions. Expression is rarely affected by biological or experimental variations.
Loading Control | Mol. Weight | Uses | Limitations |
Beta Actin |
43 kDA |
Whole cell and cytoplasmic extracts |
May exhibit variations in expression in some cell/tissue types. Not suitable as a loading control in tissues such as skeletal muscle where its expression is very high. Not suitable for studies involving subjects with a large age difference. Cannot be used as loading control of nuclear extracts as Beta actin is a component of chromatin remodeling complexes. |
Glyceraldehyde 3-phosphatase |
35 kDA |
Whole cell and cytoplasmic extracts |
Not suitable for oxygen-related studies (hypoxia causes an upregulation of GAPDH. May exhibit variations in expression in some cell/tissue types or disease states. |
Alpha Tubulin |
50 kDA |
Whole cell and cytoplasmic extracts |
Expression may be affected by anti-fungal or anti-cancer drugs. Not suitable for studies involving subjects with a large age difference. |
Beta Tubulin |
50 kDA |
Whole cell and cytoplasmic extracts |
Expression may be affected by anti-fungal or anti-cancer drugs.Not suitable for studies involving subjects with a large age difference. |
TATA-binding protein (TBP) |
38 kDA |
Nuclear extracts |
Not suitable as a loading control if nuclear components of cell have been removed from sample. |
Cyclophilin A |
19 kDA |
Nuclear extracts |
Not suitable as a loading control if nuclear components of cell have been removed from sample. |
Immunoglobulin G (IgG) |
50 kDA - Heavy chain |
Serum extracts. Used to control for non-specific protein binding to Fc receptors of antibodies during western blot analysis. |
Not suitable as a loading control of cytosolic/nuclear extract samples. |
An Overview of Loading Controls
Why are Loading Controls Used?
- Experimental failures that may be introduced via human error (uneven quantity of protein added to well) can be almost immediately distinguished. This improves efficiency and reduces time of experiments as there is no time wasted dealing with inaccurate or inconclusive results.
- Loading controls are used to establish if there has been even transfer not only of the sample, but also of the gel across the membrane. This is another common issue associated with western blot.
- The use of a loading control can also correct for the ‘edge effect’. This is when proteins added to wells at the sides of the gel drift in towards the centre. Loading controls can establish and control for this.
Limitations of Loading Controls
Although under most conditions loading control proteins do not vary in expression there may be some exceptions. These include:
- Loading control proteins may vary in expression across different tissue types (higher beta actin expression in skeletal muscle vs. elsewhere in the body).
- Loading controls proteins may vary in expression in different disease states (e.g. cancer).
- Loading controls proteins may vary in expression depending on age of subject from which the sample was taken.
- The loading control of choice must have a different molecular weight than the protein of interest so that the researcher can distinguish between the bands when performing western blot.