Scaling of an antibody validation procedure enables quantification of antibody performance in major research applications

Author:

Ayoubi Riham1ORCID,Ryan Joel2,Biddle Michael S3,Alshafie Walaa1,Fotouhi Maryam1,Bolivar Sara Gonzalez1,Ruiz Moleon Vera1,Eckmann Peter4,Worrall Donovan1,McDowell Ian1,Southern Kathleen1ORCID,Reintsch Wolfgang5,Durcan Thomas M5,Brown Claire2,Bandrowski Anita4,Virk Harvinder3ORCID,Edwards Aled M6,McPherson Peter1,Laflamme Carl1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, Structural Genomics Consortium, The Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University

2. Advanced BioImaging Facility (ABIF), McGill University

3. NIHR Respiratory BRC, Department of Respiratory Sciences, University of Leicester

4. Department of Neuroscience, UC San Diego

5. The Neuro's Early Drug Discovery Unit (EDDU), Structural Genomics Consortium, McGill University

6. Structural Genomics Consortium, University of Toronto

Abstract

Antibodies are critical reagents to detect and characterize proteins. It is commonly understood that many commercial antibodies do not recognize their intended targets, but information on the scope of the problem remains largely anecdotal, and as such, feasibility of the goal of at least one potent and specific antibody targeting each protein in a proteome cannot be assessed. Focusing on antibodies for human proteins, we have scaled a standardized characterization approach using parental and knockout cell lines (Laflamme et al., 2019) to assess the performance of 614 commercial antibodies for 65 neuroscience-related proteins. Side-by-side comparisons of all antibodies against each target, obtained from multiple commercial partners, have demonstrated that: (i) more than 50% of all antibodies failed in one or more applications, (ii) yet, ~50–75% of the protein set was covered by at least one high-performing antibody, depending on application, suggesting that coverage of human proteins by commercial antibodies is significant; and (iii) recombinant antibodies performed better than monoclonal or polyclonal antibodies. The hundreds of underperforming antibodies identified in this study were found to have been used in a large number of published articles, which should raise alarm. Encouragingly, more than half of the underperforming commercial antibodies were reassessed by the manufacturers, and many had alterations to their recommended usage or were removed from the market. This first study helps demonstrate the scale of the antibody specificity problem but also suggests an efficient strategy toward achieving coverage of the human proteome; mine the existing commercial antibody repertoire, and use the data to focus new renewable antibody generation efforts.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research

ALS Society of Canada

ALS Association

Motor Neurone Disease Association

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Genome Canada

Genome Quebec

Mitacs

Ontario Genomics

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

Subject

General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine,General Neuroscience

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