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Title: | Lack of specificity of commercially available antisera: Better specifications needed |
Authors: | Pradidarcheep W. Labruyère W.T. Dabhoiwala N.F. Lamers W.H. |
Keywords: | antiserum epitope muscarinic receptor amino acid sequence animal experiment animal tissue antibody affinity antibody specificity article immunohistochemistry knockout mouse mouse nonhuman priority journal protein analysis rat staining Western blotting Amino Acid Sequence Animals Antibody Specificity Blotting, Western Brain Epitopes Gastrointestinal Tract Immune Sera Immunohistochemistry Mice Mice, Knockout Molecular Sequence Data Rats Rats, Wistar Receptors, Muscarinic Sensitivity and Specificity Urinary Tract Mus |
Issue Date: | 2008 |
Abstract: | The ideal antiserum for immunohistochemical (IHC) applications contains mono-3 specific high-affinity antibodies with little nonspecific adherence to sections. Many commercially available antibodies are "affinity" purified, but it is unknown if they meet "hard" specificity criteria, such as absence of staining in tissues genetically deficient for the antigen or a staining pattern that is identical to that of an antibody raised against a different epitope on the same protein. Reviewers, therefore, often require additional characterization. Although the affinity-purified antibodies used in our study on the distribution of muscarinic receptors produced selective staining patterns on sections, few passed the preabsorption test, and none produced bands of the anticipated size on Western blots. More importantly, none showed a difference in staining pattern on sections or Western blots between wild-type and knockout mice. Because these antibodies were used in most studies published thus far, our findings cast doubts on the validity of the extant body of morphological knowledge of the whole family of muscarinic receptors. We formulate requirements that antibody-specification data sheets should meet and propose that journals for which IHC is a core technique facilitate consumer rating of antibodies. "Certified" antibodies could avoid fruitless and costly validation assays and should become the standard of commercial suppliers. © The Histochemical Society, Inc. |
URI: | https://ir.swu.ac.th/jspui/handle/123456789/14818 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-56449096774&doi=10.1369%2fjhc.2008.952101&partnerID=40&md5=8576473b212b7f0a621ba836fbfdc403 |
ISSN: | 221554 |
Appears in Collections: | Scopus 1983-2021 |
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