By Ryan Hamnett, PhD
Immunoprecipitation (IP) is a technique that uses antibodies to enrich or purify a target protein from a complex biological sample. Below are example protocols covering the stages of multiple IP formats and various types of sample for the isolation of target proteins. These protocols are intended as guides but exact incubation times and volumes may differ for different antibodies and beads, so the product datasheet should also be consulted.
Once samples have been prepared, they can be frozen at -80°C for long-term storage, or be used immediately for immunoprecipitation. Protein concentration should be determined by BCA or Bradford assay. As a guideline, the suggested amount of total protein per IP is 500-1,000 μg at approximately 1 μg/μl.
Cells
Non-denaturing lysis
Denaturing lysis
Tissue
Pre-clearing
Immunoprecipitation
Pre-clearing
Immunoprecipitation
SDS Denaturing elution
Glycine Buffer elution
Urea Buffer denaturing elution
Denaturing lysis buffer
Non-denaturing lysis buffer
Detergent-free lysis buffer
Some soluble proteins may be released through primarily mechanical means such as mechanical homogenization. In such cases, detergents may be unnecessary and the buffer below will suffice:
Wash buffer
Depending on the stringency required, washes can be performed using the chosen lysis buffer, or a simple buffer such as:
Glycine buffer
Following elution, the eluted sample should be immediately neutralized with Tris, pH 8-8.5
SDS buffer
Urea buffers
Pre-urea wash buffer
Urea elution buffer