Cells survive by tightly controlling protein quality. Central to this system is valosin containing protein (VCP), also known as p97, a highly conserved AAA+ ATPase that helps determine whether proteins are refolded, recycled, or targeted for degradation.
Rather than acting alone, VCP functions as a powerful molecular machine that extracts ubiquitinated proteins from complexes, membranes, and chromatin so they can be processed by downstream pathways. When this system fails, damaged and misfolded proteins accumulate, disrupting cellular homeostasis.
VCP is therefore far more than a housekeeping factor. It is a core executor of proteostasis, essential for normal cellular function, stress adaptation, and disease biology.
VCP functions as a molecular motor. Using energy from ATP hydrolysis, it extracts proteins from large complexes, membranes, or chromatin so they can be processed downstream. This mechanical action places VCP at the intersection of multiple core biological pathways:
VCP expression is elevated in many cancers, including breast, lung, ovarian, and prostate tumors, where it often correlates with poor survival outcomes. Cancer cells generate enormous amounts of misfolded proteins due to rapid proliferation and genomic instability, making them particularly reliant on VCP to survive proteotoxic stress.
This dependency makes VCP both a biomarker and a potential therapeutic target, which is why researchers across oncology, cell biology, and neuroscience measure VCP expression and activity.
Understanding VCP's biology is step one. Getting reliable, reproducible data is step two, and this is where many experiments encounter problems.
VCP presents unique technical challenges:
These factors mean that assay selection and antibody validation are not optional considerations, they're essential for data quality.
The most common mistake researchers make is using an antibody validated for one assay in a completely different experimental context.
Western blotting uses SDS and heat to fully denature proteins, exposing linear epitopes. IHC, on the other hand, often uses harsh fixation and antigen retrieval that distorts epitopes and exposes cryptic or linear portions not normally accessible in native proteins.
An antibody that works beautifully for Western blot may only recognize a denatured or linearized epitope, making it unreliable for IHC on tissue sections where protein structure is partially preserved.
Pro Tip: Verify that your antibody has been validated specifically for your assay type. Look for datasheets that include:
If the clone hasn't been tested under your preparation workflow, expect to run optimization experiments to validate performance.
For Western Blot:
VCP is expressed at relatively high levels in many cell types and cancer lines; this can create background signal and may saturate detection systems unless lysate input and antibody dilutions are optimized. Titrate your lysate carefully to avoid over-saturating your blot, which can obscure differences between experimental groups. Because VCP is stress-responsive, include appropriate controls that account for metabolic or stress conditions.
For IHC:
The fixation method significantly affects epitope accessibility. Optimize antigen retrieval protocols specific to your tissue type and fixation conditions (PFA, formalin, methanol). Pay attention to VCP's sub cellular localization, cytoplasmic, perinuclear, or nuclear staining patterns provide biological context but require careful optimization.
Positive Controls:
Use cancer cell lines that have been demonstrated to display high VCP expression, such as A549 (lung adenocarcinoma) or H1299 (non-small cell lung cancer). Alternatively, induce ER stress or nutrient deprivation to upregulate VCP expression.
Negative Controls:
If available, VCP knockdown or knockout cell lines provide the cleanest negative control. Otherwise, compare tumor tissue to normal adjacent tissue to establish baseline expression patterns.
Biological Controls:
Because VCP expression changes with cell stress, match metabolic and stress conditions between samples. Differences in VCP levels may reflect biology, not technical variability.
VCP is a central organizer of cellular protein quality control. Measuring it accurately requires antibodies validated for your specific assay, sample preparation optimized for your experimental context, and controls that account for VCP's dynamic, stress-responsive biology.
When these pieces align, VCP measurements become powerful tools for understanding cancer biology, and cellular stress responses.