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Complete Guide to Chemiluminescent Western Blotting

Introduction to Chemiluminescent Western Blotting

Chemiluminescent Western blotting is the gold standard for protein detection in molecular biology research. This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know about chemiluminescent detection systems, including substrate selection, optimization, and troubleshooting.

What is Chemiluminescence?

Chemiluminescence is a light-emitting chemical reaction used to detect proteins on Western blot membranes. The process involves enzyme-conjugated antibodies (typically HRP or alkaline phosphatase) that catalyze the oxidation of luminol-based substrates, producing light that can be captured on film or digital imagers.

Types of Chemiluminescent Substrates

HRP Substrates

Horseradish peroxidase (HRP) substrates are the most common detection reagents for Western blotting:

  • Entry-Level: PicoGlow substrates offer basic sensitivity at economical prices
  • High-Sensitivity: FemtoGlow substrates detect femtogram quantities of protein
  • Extended Signal: Substrates with stabilizers maintain signal for hours

Alkaline Phosphatase (AP) Substrates

AP substrates like AttoGlow offer advantages for certain applications:

  • Attogram-level sensitivity with enhancer reagents
  • No interference from endogenous peroxidases
  • Longer signal stability (2+ hour plateaus)
  • Compatible with stripping and reprobing

Optimizing Western Blot Detection

Choosing the Right Substrate

Substrate selection depends on target protein abundance:

  • High abundance proteins: Entry-level substrates (PicoGlow)
  • Medium abundance: Standard FemtoGlow substrates
  • Low abundance: Enhanced sensitivity substrates (FemtoGlow Plus, AttoGlow with enhancer)

Common Issues and Solutions

High Background: Use low-background formulations, optimize blocking buffer, reduce antibody concentrations

Weak Signal: Increase antibody concentration, extend incubation times, use higher sensitivity substrate

Uneven Signal: Ensure even transfer, adequate membrane wetting, proper washing

Best Practices

  • Always use fresh substrate (stable 45 days after opening for most formulations)
  • Store proteins at -20°C to maintain activity
  • Use appropriate membrane type (PVDF for proteins >20 kDa, nitrocellulose for <20 kDa)
  • Document exposures at multiple time points
  • Include positive and negative controls

Shop Chemiluminescent Substrates

Michigan Diagnostics offers a complete line of chemiluminescent substrates for Western blotting, including our flagship FemtoGlow HRP substrates and AttoGlow AP substrates. All products are manufactured in the USA with FDA-compliant quality systems.

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