Co-immunoprecipitation Controls Co-IP Controls

By Ryan Hamnett, PhD

Co-immunoprecipitation (Co-IP) is a technique that uses antibodies to isolate target protein and their binding partners from a complex biological sample. Controls are essential for confirming the accuracy, reliability and sensitivity of Co-IPs, and can assist with troubleshooting in case of spurious results.

Control Type of control Description Purpose Notes
Supernatant controls Negative Run the supernatant from each main step on the gel and western blot (WB) Confirms that target protein has successfully been depleted and held (bound by antibody) at each stage Supernatants from all steps (pre-clearing, IP, washing, elution) can be kept for troubleshooting in case the expected bands are not seen in the experimental lane
Bead only control Negative Run the co-IP as normal but in the absence of any antibody Identifies non-specific binding to the beads alone May not be necessary if performing an isotype control, which will also pick up non-specific binding to beads, but can help with troubleshooting
Isotype control Negative Run the co-IP as normal but replacing the antibody with an isotype control antibody Identifies non-specific binding to the antibody (e.g. to the Fc region) due to its isotype
Knockdown or knockout control Negative Run the full co-IP on a sample known not to express the bait protein due to knockout or knockdown Confirms the specificity of the antibody Performing the co-IP on a sample known not to express the protein naturally (e.g. because it is a different tissue type) may also be sufficient
Input control Positive Run 1-10% of the starting lysate on the gel and WB 1) Demonstrates IP for the bait was successful: there should be a band in both the IP and input lanes

2) Confirms negative results, e.g. prey successfully blotted for in input but not in IP lanes

3) Indicates co-IP efficiency: comparing strengths of target bands in IP and input lanes

4) Indicates IP specificity: comparing strengths of non-specific bands
Typically run alongside every co-IP.
Positive lane control Positive Run purified recombinant target protein on the gel and WB Serves as a positive reference Running a sample known to express high levels of the protein naturally (e.g. from a different tissue type) may also be sufficient
Bidirectional co-IP control Confirmatory Once a binding partner has been identified by co-IP, run the co-IP again but reverse the bait and prey Being able to pull down the same protein complex regardless of which protein is the bait is a useful confirmation of a physiological interaction

Table 1:Key controls to run alongside an co-IP experiment.

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