FBS Charcoal Stripping Protocol: Hormone and Steroid Depletion
What is Charcoal Stripping of FBS?
Charcoal Stripping is a method for selective removal of lipophilic substances from Fetal Bovine Serum (FBS), particularly steroid hormones, growth factors, and other small hydrophobic molecules. By treatment with Dextran-Coated Charcoal (DCC), these substances are adsorbed while polar serum components (amino acids, salts, glucose) are largely preserved.
Applications
Charcoal-Stripped FBS (CS-FBS) is essential for:
- Hormone Research – Studies on estrogens, androgens, progesterone without endogenous interference
- Cancer Research – Hormone receptor-positive breast cancer cells (MCF-7, T47D)
- Adipogenesis Studies – Differentiation of preadipocytes without confounding factors
- Endocrine Disruptors – Testing chemicals for hormonal activity
- Signaling Pathway Research – Controlled add-back experiments
Substances Removed by Charcoal Stripping
Primary Targets (Highly Depleted)
| Substance Class | Examples | Reduction |
|---|---|---|
| Steroid Hormones | Estradiol, Progesterone, Testosterone, Cortisol | >95% |
| Thyroid Hormones | T3, T4 | >90% |
| Fatty Acids | Free fatty acids, lipophilic vitamins | 70-90% |
| Lipophilic Growth Factors | Partial TGF-β, lipid-associated factors | 30-70% |
| Small Lipophilic Molecules | Vitamin D, Retinoids | 60-80% |
Preserved Components (Minimally Affected)
- ✓ Amino acids (no significant reduction)
- ✓ Glucose (stable)
- ✓ Salts and electrolytes (stable)
- ✓ Albumin (>95% retained)
- ✓ Transferrin (largely retained)
- ✓ Immunoglobulins (mostly retained)
- ✓ Polar growth factors (EGF, FGF partially retained)
Dextran-Coated Charcoal (DCC) Method
Why Dextran Coating?
Activated charcoal alone is highly nonspecific and adsorbs large proteins (albumin, globulins), leading to massive protein loss.
Dextran coating (Dextran T-70, 70 kDa) forms a steric barrier:
- ✓ Blocks adsorption of large proteins (>50 kDa)
- ✓ Allows adsorption of small lipophilic molecules (<5 kDa)
- ✓ Reduces nonspecific protein loss by 70-80%
- ✓ Improves reproducibility between batches
Validated Charcoal Stripping Protocol
Required Materials
Reagents:- Activated Charcoal Norit A (or equivalent)
- Dextran T-70 (70 kDa molecular weight)
- Sucrose
- MgCl₂ (Magnesium chloride)
- HEPES Buffer
- FBS (serum to be stripped)
- Sterile bottles/containers
- Centrifuge (minimum 3000 x g)
- Vortex mixer
- Rotational incubator (optional, recommended)
- Sterile filtration unit (0.22 µm)
- Refrigerator (+4°C) or incubator (56°C)
Step-by-Step Protocol
Day 1: DCC Suspension Preparation
| Step | Action | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Prepare stripping buffer |
Composition: - 0.25 M Sucrose (85.6 g/L) - 1.5 mM MgCl₂ (0.31 g/L) - 10 mM HEPES pH 7.4 (2.38 g/L) Dissolve in deionized water, adjust pH |
| 2 | Suspend activated charcoal |
Concentration: 2.5 g/L (0.25%) Activated charcoal Norit A in stripping buffer Mix thoroughly (vortex) |
| 3 | Add Dextran T-70 |
Concentration: 0.25 g/L (0.025%) Dextran T-70 to charcoal suspension Mix until completely dissolved |
| 4 | Overnight incubation | Incubate at +4°C overnight Rotation (slow) or magnetic stirrer Allows uniform dextran coating |
Day 2: Charcoal Stripping
| Step | Action | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | Equilibrate DCC | Bring DCC suspension to room temperature Mix well (was sedimented overnight) |
| 6 | Pellet DCC | Centrifugation: 3000 x g, 10 min Discard supernatant Charcoal pellet remains |
| 7 | Add FBS |
Ratio: 1:1 (DCC volume : FBS volume) Example: 100 mL DCC pellet + 100 mL FBS Combine in sterile bottle |
| 8 | Incubation & mixing |
Option A (Standard): 4°C, 24h, rotation Option B (+ Heat Inactivation): 56°C, 45 min, rotation Vortex every 10-15 min at 56°C |
| 9 | Centrifugation |
3000-4000 x g, 20 min, 4°C Charcoal pellets completely Supernatant = CS-FBS (still turbid) |
| 10 | 2nd Stripping (Optional but recommended) | CS-FBS with fresh DCC suspension Repeat steps 5-9 Increases depletion to >95% |
| 11 | Sterile filtration |
0.22 µm filter Removes charcoal residue Clear CS-FBS obtained |
| 12 | Quality control & storage | Visual inspection (clear, slightly yellow) Aliquot into sterile bottles Storage: -20°C, up to 12 months |
Critical Parameters & Optimization
Charcoal-to-Serum Ratio
| Ratio (DCC:FBS) | Hormone Depletion | Protein Loss | Application |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.5:1 | ~70-80% | Minimal (5-10%) | Moderate depletion, maximum protein retention |
| 1:1 (Standard) | ~85-95% | Moderate (10-15%) | Recommended for most applications |
| 2:1 | >95% | Elevated (15-25%) | Maximum depletion, higher protein loss |
Temperature & Time
4°C, 24 hours (Standard):
- ✓ Gentlest method
- ✓ Minimal protein loss
- ✓ Preserves heat-labile factors
- Longer process time
56°C, 45 minutes (+ Heat Inactivation):
- ✓ Combines stripping + complement inactivation
- ✓ Faster process
- Heat-labile factors partially damaged
- Slightly increased protein loss
Quality Control & Validation
Visual Inspection
✓ Acceptable:
- Clear to slightly opalescent
- Slight yellowing (normal)
- No visible particles after filtration
✗ Not Acceptable:
- Highly turbid (incomplete centrifugation)
- Black particles (charcoal contamination)
- Brown discoloration (over-treatment)
Biochemical Testing
| Test | Standard FBS | CS-FBS (Target) | Method |
|---|---|---|---|
| Estradiol (17β-E2) | 100-500 pg/mL | <10 pg/mL (<10⁻¹¹ M) | ELISA, LC-MS/MS |
| Testosterone | 50-200 ng/dL | <5 ng/dL | ELISA |
| Total Protein | 35-45 g/L | 28-38 g/L (80-90%) | Bradford/BCA |
| Albumin | 15-20 g/L | 14-19 g/L (>90%) | BCG Assay |
Functional Assay
MCF-7 Proliferation Test (Standard for Estrogen Depletion):
- Culture MCF-7 cells in CS-FBS (3-5 days)
- Treat with/without 17β-Estradiol (10⁻⁹ M)
- Measure proliferation (MTT, BrdU, cell counting)
- Expectation: Minimal growth without E2, strong stimulation with E2
- Control: ICI 182,780 (ER antagonist) should block E2 effect
Troubleshooting
Problem: Residual Hormone Activity (Incomplete Depletion)
Symptoms: MCF-7 cells proliferate even without E2 addition
Causes & Solutions:
- Insufficient stripping: Perform 2nd stripping round
- Charcoal ratio too low: Increase to 1:1 or 2:1
- FBS lot with high hormone content: Test different FBS source
- Incubation time too short: Extend to 24h at 4°C
Problem: Reduced Cell Growth Even with Hormones
Symptoms: Generally poor growth in CS-FBS
Causes & Solutions:
- Too aggressive stripping: Growth factors co-depleted → Increase CS-FBS concentration to 15-20%
- Protein loss too high: Increase dextran concentration (0.05%), reduce stripping time
- Charcoal contamination: Better centrifugation (higher g-force), additional filtration
Problem: Inconsistent Results Between Batches
Causes & Solutions:
- FBS quality varies: Strip larger amount from same FBS lot
- Stripping protocol inconsistent: Standardize (always same time, temperature, ratio)
- Charcoal activity fluctuates: Validate charcoal lot, always use same batch
Best Practices
✓ Recommended Procedures
- FBS lot screening: Test multiple FBS lots, select low-hormonal starting material
- Standardized protocol: Document and follow consistently (temperature, time, ratio)
- Double stripping: Always strip 2x for critical hormone studies
- Functional validation: Test each batch with relevant cell line
- Large batches: Strip 1-2 L at once, aliquot, freeze → reduces batch-to-batch variability
- Negative control: Always run standard FBS in parallel in experiments
Application Guidelines
Media Formulations with CS-FBS
Standard Cultivation:
- 15-20% CS-FBS (instead of 10% standard FBS)
- Increased concentration compensates for growth factor loss
Hormone Deprivation (Starvation):
- 2-5% CS-FBS for 24-72h before hormone add-back
- Minimizes residual hormone exposure
Dose-Response Curves:
- 5-10% CS-FBS as base medium
- Hormone titration: 10⁻¹² to 10⁻⁸ M typical for estradiol
SeamlessBio Charcoal-Stripped FBS
SeamlessBio offers professionally charcoal-stripped FBS with complete validation:
- ✓ Double stripping with Dextran-Coated Charcoal
- ✓ Estradiol levels <10 pg/mL (validated via ELISA)
- ✓ >90% protein retention (vs. non-stripped FBS)
- ✓ MCF-7 functional test for each lot
- ✓ USDA-approved origins (USA, Australia, New Zealand)
- ✓ Optional combination with Heat Inactivation or Gamma Irradiation
- ✓ Certificate of Analysis with hormone levels
- ✓ Consistent lot-to-lot performance
- ✓ German warehouse, fast delivery
🔬 Need Professionally Charcoal-Stripped FBS?
Contact our Technical Support Team for product consultation, validation data, and sample requests.
📧 Email: info@seamlessbio.de
📞 Phone: +49 851 37932226
🌐 Website: www.seamlessbio.de
References
- Sigma-Aldrich. Protocol for Charcoal-stripping FBS to Deplete Hormones. Technical Document.
- Sikora MJ, Johnson MD, Lee AV, Oesterreich S. (2016). Endocrine Response Phenotypes Are Altered by Charcoal-Stripped Serum Variability. Endocrinology 157(10):3760-3766.
- Thermo Fisher Scientific. Charcoal-Stripped FBS Technical Bulletin. 2024.
- Lippman M, Bolan G, Huff K. (1976). The effects of estrogens and antiestrogens on hormone-responsive human breast cancer in long-term tissue culture. Cancer Res 36(12):4595-601.
- Capricorn Scientific. Charcoal Stripped FBS Product Information. 2024.
Additional FBS Processing Protocols
SeamlessBio offers professional FBS processing services and detailed protocols for various applications. Contact us for more information about:
- Heat Inactivation (56°C, 30 min) – Complement inactivation
- Gamma Irradiation (25-45 kGy) – Viral and mycoplasma inactivation
- Dialysis – Adaptation to defined media
- Sterile Filtration – Additional safety (0.1 µm)
Contact: info@seamlessbio.de | Phone: +49 851 37932226