17th June 2016 – Day 20

Friday: 
Two volunteers down today and there was a lot more western blotting to get done. Normal protocol applied and more antibodies were used, we re-probed all 5 blots and we photographed each of the 5 different blot membranes, none of them revealed anything apart from my second blot, which impressively showed a little something… woop woop!!


A very straight forward day, with lots of blots to come, which was nice but I cannot believe another week gone and that also means I am half way through my internship already!!

16th June 2016 – Day 19

Thursday:
I feel like I have written hundreds of these blog entries now and at this point you would think I would be bored doing the same things every day but when things don’t work, which it turns out yesterday's western blot was not successful, then we get to try again making small changes as we go. 
I completed all 6 pull down assays from Monday again but this time with a lot more amylose beads, hopefully something will stick this time meaning that the western blot might actually work.
All of the samples were prepared for the four gels which we will use tomorrow, I look forward to seeing if it will work. (Cross your fingers for me.)
While preparing each sample with the help of one of my colleagues, she somehow managed to spill half a millilitre of SDS loading dye onto the bench top (if only you could have seen her face, first shock and then a naughty smile), at which point she decided to try and clean it up by pipetting it with a 10ul tip (instead of wiping it up), the two of us trying very hard not to laugh, but the tip made little dent in the little purple ‘puddle’.
The samples that the volunteers prepared from yesterday’s pull down assay were run on 3 gels and transferred to a membrane, normal WB protocol was carried out. All of the membranes were stripped of their antibodies using stripping buffer (clever name!!) and left in blocking buffer overnight. We are going to probe these tomorrow with different antibodies.

Today was a little confusing but we got there in the end.

15th June 2016 – Day 18

Wednesday:
Already half way through the week and it still only feels like its Tuesday. I arrived at the lab this morning only to hear that the blots hadn’t transferred, this is so frustrating but I guess it is the nature of the game. After looking at them we decided that the SDS-PAGE gel might have been left in the transfer buffer too long, the protein appeared to have diffused out of the gel and therefore we chose to abandoned these blots and not take them any further.
Luckily we don't throw away our samples until we are one hundred percent sure we no longer need them and funny enough we forgot to put them into the fridge so they were still floating about… literally floating on what used to be ice. I fished out all of the tubes and re-did the two gels from yesterday, without the beads this time. (The one for staining and the other for the western blot).
I cracked on with this while the other three volunteers carried on with pull downs assays using nickel beads and three different protein samples, from samples that were previously harvested.
It was a slow paced day but between us, we achieved a lot. The other three finished the pull downs and got them ready to transfer to a gel, which will be done tomorrow.
Everyone else left but I stayed on, I wanted to carry on with other things during the hour long incubation steps. I made all of the buffers that I would need. I do enjoy making blocking buffer (who would have ever thought about using milk powder in a western blot, genius!). I made some more de-stain for the gels, I got so excited when I was told I could do this, more clean fresh de-stain. It’s so transparent, no dye in it yet...... I suppose it’s like the bio-bins all over again..... can't help myself.
I started on with the western blot on my own and finished at 6 pm as anticipated, and really proud of myself. I carried out a western blot from start to finish all on my own, no mistakes, and finished when we had planned. So a good day all in all…. Well except for when I dropped the transfer buffer upside down into the tub upon where it all emptied out and almost went everywhere ...... but excluding that then. 
During incubation time of the antibodies on the membrane, I had a chance to take some photographs of all of the other gels, of which there are many.  It is easy to get them confused, but I was careful to ensure to label the boxes as we go.
Once the western blot was completed, we took a photograph of it, sadly it didn’t show much in the elute fraction with the amylose beads. It was very disappointing to see, well technically not to see, but we definitely know it worked because the histag antibody attached to the marker which has showed nice and clearly.
I’m really pleased to be home filling in my practical notes and just preparing mentally for tomorrow, I will be doing another western blot…cross fingers this one actually shows us something of use.

During the morning catch up with Amy while we were discussing what we were going to be doing for the day, I saw out of the corner of my eye, someone sneak into the lab and nick one of our new bio-bins, I realise now that perhaps we shouldn't have flaunted our wealth quite so much. Haha but at least we know where the new stash is being kept.

14th June 2016 – Day 17

Tuesday:
We continued the pull down assay with the proteins and bead that I put on to incubate overnight. We loaded the flow through samples on to one gel and the beads on to the other two gels.
The stained flow through gel appeared to have a lot less protein than before…. which is good it means that more proteins have bound to the beads this time.
The other 2 gels with the elution and bead samples were transferred to a nitrocellulose membrane for western blotting.


While the gel was running we prepared 2 more SDS-Page gels. Once transferred, the membrane was put in blocking overnight.
We then decided to optimise the beads used for the pull down and used a mixture of amylose beads for one protein and nickel beads on an identical protein in order to compare them. We ran all of the samples on a gel.
 

Today was very challenging-phew!!