Thermo scientific western blot buffers including blocking buffers, stripping buffers and wash buffers

Learn about our specially formulated buffers for every step of western blot processing and detection. We offer a wide range of blocking buffers, wash buffers, detergents, and western blot stripping buffers to help generate the best data possible from your western blots.

Recommended western blot blocking buffers to optimize the detection of your target proteins

Blocking bufferBlocking agentHighlightsWhen to useAvailable formats
Chemiluminescent western blotting
StartingBlock
Blocking Buffer

Serum- and biotin-free single purified protein

  • Performs well with a wide range of antibodies and antibody combinations.
  • Compatible with streptavidin systems
  • Blocks in less than 15 minutes
  • High background with current blocking buffer
  • Stripping and reprobing western blots
PBS
TBS
PBST
TBST
Blocker Casein

Purified protein

  • Single-protein blocking buffer provides fewer chances of cross-reaction with assay components than serum or milk solutions
  • Use when high background seen with Non-fat milk blockers
PBS
TBS
Blocker BSA

Purified bovine serum albumin

  • 10% solutions of high-quality bovine serum albumin
  • Single purified protein provides fewer chances of cross-reaction with assay components than serum or milk solutions
  • Use when targeting phospho-proteins
  • Best to use when storing reused antibodies in blocker
PBS
TBS
Fluorescent western blotting
Blocker FL

Single purified protein

  • Blocks excess nonspecific binding sites to help reduce background fluorescence
  • Works with both nitrocellulose and low fluorescence PVDF membranes
  • Detergent-free
  • Blocks in 15-30 minutes
  • Fluorescence western blotting
  • Imaging and storage of dry fluorescence blots
10X concentrate

View all available western blot blocking buffers.

Before probing for proteins of interest, the remaining binding surface of the membrane must be blocked to prevent the nonspecific binding of the antibodies. Otherwise, the antibodies or other detection reagents will bind to any remaining sites on the membrane that initially served to immobilize the proteins of interest. In principle, any protein that does not have binding affinity for the target or probe components in the assay can be used for blocking.

A variety of blocking buffers ranging from milk or normal serum to highly purified proteins can be used to block free sites on a membrane. The ideal blocking buffer will bind to all potential sites of nonspecific interaction, eliminating background altogether without altering or obscuring the epitope for antibody binding. Blocking buffers can influence antibody binding and specificity- so optimization is needed. No single protein or mixture of proteins works best for all western blot experiments, and empirical testing is necessary to obtain the best possible results for a given combination of specific antibodies, membrane type and substrate system.

Choose from dry blend packs or pouches of pre-blended powder mixtures of commonly-needed buffers, such as PBS and TBS for western blot methods.

 TBSPBSTBSTPBST
Dry blendBupH Tris Buffered Saline Packs
(Cat. No. 28376 and 28379 - 40, 10 pks)
BupH Phosphate Buffered Saline Packs
(Cat. No. 28372 - 40 pks)
  
Liquid conc.Pierce 20X TBS Buffer
(Cat. No. 28358 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X Phosphate Buffered Saline
(Cat. No. 28348 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X TBS Tween 20 Buffer
(Cat. No. 28360 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X PBS Tween 20 Buffer
(Cat. No. 28352 - 500ml)
Formulation
  • 25mM Tris
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • pH 7.2
  • 10mM sodium phosphate
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • pH 7.5
  • 25mM Tris
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • 0.05% Tween-20
  • pH 7.5
  • 10mM sodium phosphate
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • 0.05% Tween-20
  • pH 7.5

Washing steps are necessary through the series of incubations to remove unbound reagents and reduce background. Insufficient washing produces high background, while excessive washing may result in decreased sensitivity caused by elution of the antibody and/or antigen from the blot.

A variety of buffers may be used. Washing is performed in physiological buffers such as Tris-buffered saline (TBS) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Detergents such as Tween-20 can be added to the buffer to help remove nonspecifically bound material. The amount of Tween-20 (0.05%-0.2%) will vary depending on the strength of the antibodies used. Weak binding antibodies may be washed away by too much detergent.

In applications where alkaline phosphatase conjugates are used, TBS should be selected as PBS interferes with alkaline phosphatase. When performing fluorescent western blotting, it is recommended to eliminate the detergent from the blocking step. Detergents auto-fluoresce and will contribute to higher background.

Choosing the right buffer for your need

 Tween-20TBSPBS
HRP conjugated systemsYYY
AP conjugated systemsYYN
Fluorescent systemsN (can be used after blocking step)YY

Western blot stripping buffers

Reprobing a western blot saves time and conserves sample while allowing optimization to be performed as needed. These specially formulated stripping buffers are designed to dissociate and strip primary and secondary antibodies from western blots so that membranes can be reprobed under alternate conditions or with another antibody to detect a different protein target.

 Restore Stripping BufferRestore Plus StrippingRestore Fluorescent Western Blot Stripping Buffer
Features
  • Gentle, odor-free
  • Robust yet gentle, odor free
  • Designed for use with antibodies that are difficult to remove from western blots, require longer incubation times, or incubation temperatures greater than 22°C
  • Gentle and highly effective reagent for quickly removing primary and near-infrared (IR) dye-labeled secondary antibodies from western blots
MembraneNC and PVDFNC and PVDFUse with low fluorescence PVDF membranes (e.g., 22860)
Time of incubation15-30 min at 37°C5-15 mins at RT or 37°C for high affinity antibodies10-20 min at RT
When to useIf primary antibody is susceptible to stripping buffersTo remove high-affinity primary antibodiesTo remove NIR-labeled antibodies
Cat. No.21059 (500 mL)
21063 (5 L)
46430 (500 mL)62300 (100 mL)

Advantages of stripping and reprobing blots

There are several major reasons to choose to strip and reprobe a western blot. Following are some of the most important:

Conserves sampleWhen the protein mixture is rare or valuable, reprobing conserves the sample and allows the membrane to be analyzed with the same or different antibodies.
Saves timeIt is time-consuming to run an SDS-polyacrylamide gel and then transfer the proteins to a membrane. By using the same blot for several different detections, you save time.
Saves moneyBy reusing the same blot, you save money on the costs of membrane, buffers and protein sample.
Assay optimization is easierThe light emission intensity of high sensitivity chemiluminescent substrates often require antibody concentration optimization to achieve the highest quality blot. Optimization is achieved easily by stripping the membrane and reprobing with a different antibody concentration.
Quickly confirm atypical resultsWhen immunoblot results are not as expected, reprobing allows the use of the same protein sample without going back to gel electrophoresis.
Correct mistakesImmunoblotting requires many steps, providing ample opportunity for mistakes to occur. By stripping the membrane, the blot can be reused.

Signal enhancements

SuperSignal Western Blot Enhancer
SuperSignal Western Blot Enhancer

Need: Protein is difficult to detect because of low abundance or poor immunoreactivity

Solution: Membrane treatment reagent and a primary antibody diluent that increases both signal intensity and sensitivity 3- to 10-fold compared to a detection performed without it.

Catalog No.46640
Clean-Blot IP Detection Reagent
Pierce Clean-Blot IP Detection Reagent

Need: Obstructed detection of target protein due to interference from both heavy-chain and light-chain IgG fragments from immunoprecipitation assay

Solution: HRP conjugate that is optimized for post-immunoprecipitation western blot detection of primary antibodies without interference from denatured immunoprecipitation (IP) antibody fragments.

Catalog No.21230 (HRP Reagent only)
21232 (Clean-Blot IP Detection Kit)

Blocking buffers

Wash buffers and detergents

Stripping buffers

Recommended western blot blocking buffers to optimize the detection of your target proteins

Blocking bufferBlocking agentHighlightsWhen to useAvailable formats
Chemiluminescent western blotting
StartingBlock
Blocking Buffer

Serum- and biotin-free single purified protein

  • Performs well with a wide range of antibodies and antibody combinations.
  • Compatible with streptavidin systems
  • Blocks in less than 15 minutes
  • High background with current blocking buffer
  • Stripping and reprobing western blots
PBS
TBS
PBST
TBST
Blocker Casein

Purified protein

  • Single-protein blocking buffer provides fewer chances of cross-reaction with assay components than serum or milk solutions
  • Use when high background seen with Non-fat milk blockers
PBS
TBS
Blocker BSA

Purified bovine serum albumin

  • 10% solutions of high-quality bovine serum albumin
  • Single purified protein provides fewer chances of cross-reaction with assay components than serum or milk solutions
  • Use when targeting phospho-proteins
  • Best to use when storing reused antibodies in blocker
PBS
TBS
Fluorescent western blotting
Blocker FL

Single purified protein

  • Blocks excess nonspecific binding sites to help reduce background fluorescence
  • Works with both nitrocellulose and low fluorescence PVDF membranes
  • Detergent-free
  • Blocks in 15-30 minutes
  • Fluorescence western blotting
  • Imaging and storage of dry fluorescence blots
10X concentrate

View all available western blot blocking buffers.

Before probing for proteins of interest, the remaining binding surface of the membrane must be blocked to prevent the nonspecific binding of the antibodies. Otherwise, the antibodies or other detection reagents will bind to any remaining sites on the membrane that initially served to immobilize the proteins of interest. In principle, any protein that does not have binding affinity for the target or probe components in the assay can be used for blocking.

A variety of blocking buffers ranging from milk or normal serum to highly purified proteins can be used to block free sites on a membrane. The ideal blocking buffer will bind to all potential sites of nonspecific interaction, eliminating background altogether without altering or obscuring the epitope for antibody binding. Blocking buffers can influence antibody binding and specificity- so optimization is needed. No single protein or mixture of proteins works best for all western blot experiments, and empirical testing is necessary to obtain the best possible results for a given combination of specific antibodies, membrane type and substrate system.

Choose from dry blend packs or pouches of pre-blended powder mixtures of commonly-needed buffers, such as PBS and TBS for western blot methods.

 TBSPBSTBSTPBST
Dry blendBupH Tris Buffered Saline Packs
(Cat. No. 28376 and 28379 - 40, 10 pks)
BupH Phosphate Buffered Saline Packs
(Cat. No. 28372 - 40 pks)
  
Liquid conc.Pierce 20X TBS Buffer
(Cat. No. 28358 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X Phosphate Buffered Saline
(Cat. No. 28348 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X TBS Tween 20 Buffer
(Cat. No. 28360 - 500ml)
Pierce 20X PBS Tween 20 Buffer
(Cat. No. 28352 - 500ml)
Formulation
  • 25mM Tris
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • pH 7.2
  • 10mM sodium phosphate
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • pH 7.5
  • 25mM Tris
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • 0.05% Tween-20
  • pH 7.5
  • 10mM sodium phosphate
  • 0.15M NaCl
  • 0.05% Tween-20
  • pH 7.5

Washing steps are necessary through the series of incubations to remove unbound reagents and reduce background. Insufficient washing produces high background, while excessive washing may result in decreased sensitivity caused by elution of the antibody and/or antigen from the blot.

A variety of buffers may be used. Washing is performed in physiological buffers such as Tris-buffered saline (TBS) or phosphate-buffered saline (PBS). Detergents such as Tween-20 can be added to the buffer to help remove nonspecifically bound material. The amount of Tween-20 (0.05%-0.2%) will vary depending on the strength of the antibodies used. Weak binding antibodies may be washed away by too much detergent.

In applications where alkaline phosphatase conjugates are used, TBS should be selected as PBS interferes with alkaline phosphatase. When performing fluorescent western blotting, it is recommended to eliminate the detergent from the blocking step. Detergents auto-fluoresce and will contribute to higher background.

Choosing the right buffer for your need

 Tween-20TBSPBS
HRP conjugated systemsYYY
AP conjugated systemsYYN
Fluorescent systemsN (can be used after blocking step)YY

Western blot stripping buffers

Reprobing a western blot saves time and conserves sample while allowing optimization to be performed as needed. These specially formulated stripping buffers are designed to dissociate and strip primary and secondary antibodies from western blots so that membranes can be reprobed under alternate conditions or with another antibody to detect a different protein target.

 Restore Stripping BufferRestore Plus StrippingRestore Fluorescent Western Blot Stripping Buffer
Features
  • Gentle, odor-free
  • Robust yet gentle, odor free
  • Designed for use with antibodies that are difficult to remove from western blots, require longer incubation times, or incubation temperatures greater than 22°C
  • Gentle and highly effective reagent for quickly removing primary and near-infrared (IR) dye-labeled secondary antibodies from western blots
MembraneNC and PVDFNC and PVDFUse with low fluorescence PVDF membranes (e.g., 22860)
Time of incubation15-30 min at 37°C5-15 mins at RT or 37°C for high affinity antibodies10-20 min at RT
When to useIf primary antibody is susceptible to stripping buffersTo remove high-affinity primary antibodiesTo remove NIR-labeled antibodies
Cat. No.21059 (500 mL)
21063 (5 L)
46430 (500 mL)62300 (100 mL)

Advantages of stripping and reprobing blots

There are several major reasons to choose to strip and reprobe a western blot. Following are some of the most important:

Conserves sampleWhen the protein mixture is rare or valuable, reprobing conserves the sample and allows the membrane to be analyzed with the same or different antibodies.
Saves timeIt is time-consuming to run an SDS-polyacrylamide gel and then transfer the proteins to a membrane. By using the same blot for several different detections, you save time.
Saves moneyBy reusing the same blot, you save money on the costs of membrane, buffers and protein sample.
Assay optimization is easierThe light emission intensity of high sensitivity chemiluminescent substrates often require antibody concentration optimization to achieve the highest quality blot. Optimization is achieved easily by stripping the membrane and reprobing with a different antibody concentration.
Quickly confirm atypical resultsWhen immunoblot results are not as expected, reprobing allows the use of the same protein sample without going back to gel electrophoresis.
Correct mistakesImmunoblotting requires many steps, providing ample opportunity for mistakes to occur. By stripping the membrane, the blot can be reused.

Signal enhancements

SuperSignal Western Blot Enhancer
SuperSignal Western Blot Enhancer

Need: Protein is difficult to detect because of low abundance or poor immunoreactivity

Solution: Membrane treatment reagent and a primary antibody diluent that increases both signal intensity and sensitivity 3- to 10-fold compared to a detection performed without it.

Catalog No.46640
Clean-Blot IP Detection Reagent
Pierce Clean-Blot IP Detection Reagent

Need: Obstructed detection of target protein due to interference from both heavy-chain and light-chain IgG fragments from immunoprecipitation assay

Solution: HRP conjugate that is optimized for post-immunoprecipitation western blot detection of primary antibodies without interference from denatured immunoprecipitation (IP) antibody fragments.

Catalog No.21230 (HRP Reagent only)
21232 (Clean-Blot IP Detection Kit)

Blocking buffers

Wash buffers and detergents

Stripping buffers

How-to videos

How to probe a western blot

See the steps involved in western blot analysis after transferring your proteins to a membrane.

How to strip and reprobe your western blots

Learn how to reprobe your western blot using Restore Stripping Buffers.

Resources

For Research Use Only. Not for use in diagnostic procedures.