丁香实验_LOGO
登录
提问
我要登录
|免费注册
点赞
收藏
wx-share
分享

Production of Antipeptide Antibodies

互联网

1269
Peptides (8–20 residues) are as effective as proteins in raising antibodies, both polyclonal and monoclonal with a titer above 20,000 easily achievable. A successful antipeptide antibody production depends on several factors such as peptide sequence selection, peptide synthesis, peptide–carrier protein conjugation, the choice of the host animal, and antibody purification. Peptide sequence selection is likely the most difficult and critical step in the development of antipeptide antibodies. Although the format for designing peptide antigens is not precise, several guidelines can help maximize the likelihood of producing high-quality antipeptide antibodies. Typically, 5–20 mg of peptide is enough for raising an antibody, for preparing a peptide affinity column, and for antibody titer determination using an enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA). Usually, it takes 3 months to raise a polyclonal antipeptide antibody from a rabbit that yields ~90 mL of serum which translates into approximately 8–10 mg of the specific antibody after peptide affinity purification.
提问
扫一扫
丁香实验小程序二维码
实验小助手
丁香实验公众号二维码
关注公众号
反馈
TOP
打开小程序