Litcius/Paper detail

Antibody validation for Western blot: By the user, for the user

Lakshmi Pillai‐Kastoori, Sam Heaton, Steve Shiflett, Annabelle C. Roberts, Alejandra Solache, Amy Schutz‐Geschwender

2020Journal of Biological Chemistry57 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Well-characterized antibody reagents play a key role in the reproducibility of research findings, and inconsistent antibody performance leads to variability in Western blotting and other immunoassays. The current lack of clear, accepted standards for antibody validation and reporting of experimental details contributes to this problem. Because the performance of primary antibodies is strongly influenced by assay context, recommendations for validation and usage are unique to each type of immunoassay. Practical strategies are proposed for the validation of primary antibody specificity, selectivity, and reproducibility using Western blot analysis. The antibody should produce reproducible results within and between Western blotting experiments and the observed effect confirmed with a complementary or orthogonal method. Routine implementation of standardized antibody validation and reporting in immunoassays such as Western blotting may promote improved reproducibility across the global life sciences community. Well-characterized antibody reagents play a key role in the reproducibility of research findings, and inconsistent antibody performance leads to variability in Western blotting and other immunoassays. The current lack of clear, accepted standards for antibody validation and reporting of experimental details contributes to this problem. Because the performance of primary antibodies is strongly influenced by assay context, recommendations for validation and usage are unique to each type of immunoassay. Practical strategies are proposed for the validation of primary antibody specificity, selectivity, and reproducibility using Western blot analysis. The antibody should produce reproducible results within and between Western blotting experiments and the observed effect confirmed with a complementary or orthogonal method. Routine implementation of standardized antibody validation and reporting in immunoassays such as Western blotting may promote improved reproducibility across the global life sciences community.

Topics & Concepts

BlotReproducibilityContext (archaeology)AntibodyImmunoassayWestern blotComputational biologyImmunologyChemistryBiologyChromatographyBiochemistryPaleontologyGeneMonoclonal and Polyclonal Antibodies ResearchViral Infectious Diseases and Gene Expression in InsectsCRISPR and Genetic Engineering