Tell your cell story with Invitrogen antibody labeling kits
- Reactive dyes—for “do-it-yourself” antibody conjugation, choose from a wide variety of colors with the protein labeling reagent selection guide
- Antibody labeling kits—take advantage of preoptimized protocols and kits, including everything needed to enable your successful labeling experiment. Choose the right kit for your experiment using the antibody labeling kit selection tool
- Custom fluorescent antibody labeling—expert antibody conjugation that gives an excellent conjugation outcome
In addition to exceptional brightness and photostability, our customers can get access to an experienced, problem-solving technical support team, application and experimental tips, and protocols to help with experimental planning.
Not sure which type of conjugation kit to use? Explore the table and sections below to find the best type of antibody conjugation kit for your application.
Which antibody labeling kit do you need?
These kits have quick protocols and conjugates that are ready in 15 minutes or less.
Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits | Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg | 1–20 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity |
Can measure degree of labeling? | No | No |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | No |
Site-specific label? | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | No | No |
Time required for protocol | 15 min | 5 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
These kits use conventional amine-reactive dyes that covalently label primary amines on an antibody.
Standard amine-reactive antibody labeling kits | Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits | Large-scale antibody labeling kits | ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg | 100 µg | 1 mg | 20 or 100 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | |||
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Site-specific label? | No | No | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | No | No | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes - included | No | Yes - included | Yes - included |
Time required for protocol | 60 min | 15 min | 60 min | 60 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
These methods prevent labeling of the antigen binding site.
SiteClick Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg–5 mg |
Label target/method | Carbohydrates on IgG heavy chain/covalent, copper-free click chemistry |
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes |
Site-specific label? | Yes |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes - included |
Time required for protocol | overnight incubation |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | |
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
Antibody labeling kits to rapidly screen for the binding of therapeutic antibodies
Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits | ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 1–20 µg (96 labelings) | 20 or 100 µg (5 labelings) |
Label target/method | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry |
Can measure degree of labeling? | No | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | No | Yes |
Site-specific label? | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | Yes | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | No | Yes—included |
Time required for protocol | 5 min | 60 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
pHrodo dyes are nonfluorescent at neutral pH and become brightly fluorescent in the acidic environment as they are internalized.
pHrodo Antibody Labeling Kits | SiteClick pHrodo Antibody Labeling Kits | Zenon pHrodo Antibody Labeling Reagents | |
---|---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 20 µg–1 mg | 100 µg–5 mg | 1–20 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity |
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes | Yes | No |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | Yes | No |
Site-specific label? | No | Yes | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | Yes | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes—included | Yes—included | No |
Time required for protocol | 60 min | Overnight incubation | 5 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | |||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
These kits have quick protocols and conjugates that are ready in 15 minutes or less.
Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits | Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg | 1–20 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity |
Can measure degree of labeling? | No | No |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | No |
Site-specific label? | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | No | No |
Time required for protocol | 15 min | 5 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
These kits use conventional amine-reactive dyes that covalently label primary amines on an antibody.
Standard amine-reactive antibody labeling kits | Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits | Large-scale antibody labeling kits | ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg | 100 µg | 1 mg | 20 or 100 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | |||
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes | No | Yes | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Site-specific label? | No | No | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | No | No | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes - included | No | Yes - included | Yes - included |
Time required for protocol | 60 min | 15 min | 60 min | 60 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
These methods prevent labeling of the antigen binding site.
SiteClick Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 100 µg–5 mg |
Label target/method | Carbohydrates on IgG heavy chain/covalent, copper-free click chemistry |
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes |
Site-specific label? | Yes |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes - included |
Time required for protocol | overnight incubation |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | |
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
Antibody labeling kits to rapidly screen for the binding of therapeutic antibodies
Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits | ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits | |
---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 1–20 µg (96 labelings) | 20 or 100 µg (5 labelings) |
Label target/method | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry |
Can measure degree of labeling? | No | Yes |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | No | Yes |
Site-specific label? | No | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | Yes | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | No | Yes—included |
Time required for protocol | 5 min | 60 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | ||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
pHrodo dyes are nonfluorescent at neutral pH and become brightly fluorescent in the acidic environment as they are internalized.
pHrodo Antibody Labeling Kits | SiteClick pHrodo Antibody Labeling Kits | Zenon pHrodo Antibody Labeling Reagents | |
---|---|---|---|
Amount IgG labeled/reaction* | 20 µg–1 mg | 100 µg–5 mg | 1–20 µg |
Label target/method | Free lysines/covalent amine-reactive chemistry | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity | Fc portion of IgG/antibody affinity |
Can measure degree of labeling? | Yes | Yes | No |
Can store conjugate more than 24 hr? | Yes | Yes | No |
Site-specific label? | No | Yes | No |
Compatible with BSA or other stabilizers in sample buffer? | No | Yes | Yes |
Requires post-label purification? | Yes—included | Yes—included | No |
Time required for protocol | 60 min | Overnight incubation | 5 min |
Optimal applications** | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA | FC, IF, WB, HCA |
*Kits are optimized for whole IgG protein, molecular weight 150 kDa unless otherwise indicated. For those kits, please see instructions on how to adjust protein concentration for optimal dye:protein ratios. | |||
**FC=flow cytometry; IF=immunofluorescence; WB=western blot analysis; HCA=high content analysis |
Not looking for a kit or need a different dye?
For flow cytometry antibody conjugation, see the NovaFluor Dyes for Immunophenotyping which are designed for more resolution with narrow emission spectra and minimal cross-laser excitation.
Find DyLight antibody labeling kits for labeling 1 mg or 100 μg of antibody with DyLight fluorophores across the spectrum.
Find standalone amine-reactive dyes and more information about amine-reactive chemistries in Fluorophores and Their Amine-Reactive Derivatives—Chapter 1, The Molecular Probes Handbook.
We also have thiol-reactive dyes available as standalone reagents and you can learn more about these in the Thiol-Reactive Probes—Chapter 2, The Molecular Probes Handbook.
Amine-reactive antibody labeling kits
Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits
Zip Alexa Fluor Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits allow you to efficiently label your precious antibody with fluorescent dyes to create an antibody conjugate that is ready to use within 15 minutes.
- Label 100 μg of IgG antibody
- Three labeling reactions per kit
- Very fast and easy to use
- 100% antibody recovery—no purification steps
- No chemistry or conjugation experience needed
The kit contains everything you need to perform three separate labeling reactions. Covalently labeled conjugates are exceptional for multiple applications, including flow cytometry, fluorescence microscopy, immunohistochemistry, primary antibody detection, ELISAs, immunocytochemistry, and indirect FISH. Simply add 1 mL water to component A containing Zip buffer, add 1 mg of antibody, incubate for 15 minutes, and your antibody is ready to use (Figure 1).
Zip Rapid Antibody Labeling Kits selection guide
Ex/Em = Fluorescence excitation and emission maxima, in nm.
Find more information about Alexa Fluor dyes and other fluorophores in the Fluorophore Selection Guide
Standard amine-reactive antibody labeling kits
Thermo Fisher Scientific standard amine-reactive antibody labeling kits label 100 µg IgG polyclonal and monoclonal antibodies with our exceptional Alexa Fluor, Pacific Blue, or Pacific Orange dyes.
- Label 100 µg
- Five labeling reactions per kit
- Labeled antibodies ready in 90 minutes
- ~15 minutes actual hands-on time
- Requires removal of BSA and other protein stabilizers prior to labeling reaction
The antibody labeling kits utilize an amine-reactive Alexa Fluor, Pacific Blue or Pacific Orange fluorophore to covalently attach the label to the IgG antibody of interest. Once formed, the covalent bond between the label and the protein is extremely stable and you are using the same chemistry we use to prepare our own primary and secondary conjugates.
These kits are optimized for labeling 100 µg of antibody per reaction. Simply adjust the protein concentration to ~1 mg/mL in the provided buffer, then add it to a vial of amine-reactive dye. Any stabilizing proteins (e.g., BSA) must be removed prior to the labeling reaction.
Purification is accomplished on a size exclusion spin column optimized for ≥40 kDa proteins (Figure 2). The entire labeling and purification procedure can be completed in as little as 90 minutes; everything needed to perform five conjugations is provided.
Figure 2. Overview of antibody labeling kits process. Simply adjust the protein concentration to ~1 mg/mL in the provided buffer, then add it to a vial of amine-reactive dye. Purification is accomplished on a size exclusion spin column optimized for ≥40 kDa proteins.
Antibody labeling kits selection guide
Label | Ex/Em | Cat. No. |
---|---|---|
Alexa Fluor 350 | 346/442 | A20180 |
Alexa Fluor 488 | 495/519 | A20181 |
Alexa Fluor 532 | 532/553 | A20182 |
Alexa Fluor 546 | 556/573 | A20183 |
Alexa Fluor 555 | 555/565 | A20187 |
Alexa Fluor 568 | 578/603 | A20184 |
Alexa Fluor 594 | 590/617 | A20185 |
Alexa Fluor 647 | 650/665 | A20186 |
Alexa Fluor 680 | 684/707 | A20188 |
Alexa Fluor 790 | 784/814 | A20189 |
Pacific Blue dye | 410/455 | P30013 |
Pacific Orange dye | 405/551 | P30014 |
Ex/Em = Fluorescence excitation and emission maxima, in nm.
Find more information about Alexa Fluor dyes and other fluorophores in the Fluorophore Selection Guide
ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits
Invitrogen ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits redefine what it means to be “conjugation-ready” by providing an easy-to-use conjugation kit for labeling antibodies in presence of impurities like BSA and other protein stabilizers.
Our ReadyLabel dyes are now available in 7 colors, allowing the detection of up to 8 targets with DAPI for your multiplex or spatial experiments.
- Label 20 μg or 100 μg of IgG antibody
- 5 labeling reactions per kit
- Labeled antibodies ready in 60 minutes
- ~20 minutes of actual hands-on time
- No antibody purification step needed
- Single or multiplex staining
ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits allow for fast, convenient antibody conjugation of off-the-shelf antibodies and cell culture supernatants without prior purification of the antibody solution. This works because the provided ReadyLabel spin columns contain resin that filter out contaminating stabilizer proteins present in the antibody solution (Figure 3). The resulting covalently bonded antibody conjugate can be used with flow cytometry, western blotting, ELISA, and indirect FISH.
ReadyLabel kits are equipped with your choice of our most popular stains to produce high yields of bright, soluble conjugates. Need a different dye? Consider our ReadyLabel Flex Kits, which contain everything needed except the dye, and use a dye of your choice. All our ReadyLabel kits are available in two different pack sizes, designed for labelings of 20 μg and 100 μg of IgG per reaction, and include all components necessary for five labeling reactions.
Figure 3. Antibodies are often stored with BSA or other protein stabilizers to prevent degradation. ReadyLabel kits are equipped with resin-containing spin columns that capture these contaminants and allow you to skip the purification step of your antibody solution. With approximately 20 minutes of hands-on time, and 30 minutes of incubation at room temperature, your covalently bonded antibody conjugate is now ready to use.
ReadyLabel multiplexing capabilities:
ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits offer a unique advantage for multiplexing experiments. Unlike secondary detection methods, which are often constrained by the number of available IgG species, our kits allow you to directly conjugate your primary antibodies. This means you can achieve higher levels of multiplexing with greater flexibility.
Designed with high-quality, bright dyes and a focus on minimizing background noise, our kits enable clear and precise signals in your experiments. This clarity enhances the reliability and accuracy of your results, making ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits well suited for multiplexing applications.
Figure 4. FFPE Human Tonsil Tissue is stained with three primary antibodies conjugated using ReadyLabel kits: CD45RB-Alexa Fluor 488 ReadyLabel conjugate, CD68-Alexa Fluor 594 ReadyLabel conjugate (using Alexa Fluor 594 NHS Ester with our ReadyLabel Flex Antibody Labeling Kit), PCNA-Alexa Fluor 647 ReadyLabel conjugate.
How to: ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits protocol
Ordering information for ReadyLabel Antibody Labeling Kits
Large-scale antibody labeling kits
Thermo Fisher Scientific large-scale antibody or protein labeling kits provide a nearly effortless way to covalently label 1 mg of IgG antibody with a fluorescent dye (including Alexa Fluor dyes) or biotin.
- Label 1 mg antibody
- Three labeling reactions in each kit
- Removal of BSA and other stabilizers is required prior to labeling
- Not compatible with amine-containing buffers (e.g., Tris)
- Ready to use in 2 hours
- ~ 30 minutes actual hands-on time
The large-scale antibody or protein labeling kits utilize an amine-reactive fluorophore or hapten to covalently attach the label to the IgG antibody. Once formed, the covalent bond between the label and the protein is extremely stable—you are using the same chemistry we use to prepare our own primary and secondary conjugates.
Simply add ~1 mg of purified IgG (in ~500 μL and free of amine-containing buffers such as Tris) to one of the vials containing a premeasured quantity of amine-reactive dye and a magnetic stir bar. Purification is accomplished by a pre-packed spin column supplied with the kit and affords high antibody recovery (typically >85%). The entire labeling and purification procedure can be completed in as little as 90 minutes (approximately 15 mins hands-on time). Removal of free dye is essential for the determination of the degree of labeling (DOL). Everything needed to perform three conjugations is provided.
Figure 5. Overview of the large-scale antibody labeling kits process. Adjust the protein concentration to ~2 mg/mL, add provided bicarbonate, then add the solution to the vial of reactive dye. Purification is accomplished using a pre-packed spin column that is compatible with proteins ≥20 kDa.
Large-scale antibody or protein labeling kits selection guide
Label | Ex/Em | Cat. No. |
---|---|---|
Alexa Fluor 350 | 346/442 | A10170 |
Alexa Fluor 488 | 495/519 | A10235 |
Alexa Fluor 532 | 532/553 | A10236 |
Alexa Fluor 546 | 556/573 | A10237 |
Alexa Fluor 555 | 555/565 | A20174 |
Alexa Fluor 568 | 578/603 | A10238 |
Alexa Fluor 594 | 590/617 | A10239 |
Alexa Fluor 633 | 621/639 | A20170 |
Alexa Fluor 647 | 650/665 | A20173 |
Alexa Fluor 660 | 663/690 | A20171 |
Alexa Fluor 680 | 679/702 | A20172 |
Fluorescein | 494/518 | F10240 |
Oregon Green 488 | 496/524 | O10241 |
Pacific Blue dye | 410/455 | P30012 |
Pacific Orange dye | 400/551 | P30016 |
Texas Red dye | 595/615 | T10244 |
Biotin | NA | D20655 |
Ex/Em = Fluorescence excitation and emission maxima, in nm.
Find more information about Alexa Fluor dyes and other fluorophores in the Fluorophore Selection Guide
Affinity antibody labeling kits
Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits
Invitrogen Zenon labeling technology rapidly conjugates antibodies to a variety of fluorochromes, even from minimal, unpurified sources like hybridoma culture supernatant. Designed to bind to the Fc portion of primary antibodies, Zenon fragments enable specific, noncovalent labeling of small antibody quantities without compromising antibody function. Zenon Alexa Fluor Plus labeling reagents merge Zenon technology's speed and scalability with the excellent performance of Alexa Fluor Plus dyes, offering an optimal system for screening antibody binding in therapeutic antibody discovery.
- 5-minute incubation time
- 1–20 µg primary antibody per labeling
- Compatible with BSA and other stabilizing proteins
- No purification step
- Enables rapid screening of antibody binding
- Preserves primary antibody function
Invitrogen Zenon labeling reagents provide a quick and easy-to-use system to noncovalently label human, mouse, and rabbit IgG antibodies with a variety of fluorophores. Prelabeled Zenon Fab fragments are designed to rapidly bind to the Fc portion of IgG antibodies, preserving antibody function. Zenon Fab-antibody conjugation occurs in less than 5 minutes, with only a small amount of starting material needed and no purification steps required.
Using Zenon labeling reagents for rapid screening of antibody binding
The new Invitrogen Zenon Alexa Fluor Plus labeling reagents have been optimized to screen for antibody binding, giving a bright fluorescence-based indication of antibody binding. These reagents combine the rapid and scalable Zenon technology with the superior Alexa Fluor Plus fluorophores to provide a higher signal to noise ratio and to increase confidence in your screening results.
Want to learn more about screening for binding of therapeutic antibodies?
View our Scientific Poster for Antibody Labeling Reagents for Therapeutic Antibody Screening
Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits for antibody binding
See Zenon pHrodo Labeling Reagents
Zenon Antibody Labeling Kits for multiplex immunofluorescence
Reactivity | Target isotype | Find products |
---|---|---|
Mouse | IgG1 | See all kits |
Human | IgG | See all kits |
Rabbit | IgG | See all kits |
Site-specific antibody labeling kits
Click chemistry labeling with SiteClick Antibody Labeling Kits
Thermo Fisher Scientific SiteClick labeling kits allow simple and gentle site-selective attachment of detection molecules to heavy chain N-linked glycans—far from the antigen-binding domain—providing excellent reproducibility from labeling to labeling and from antibody to antibody. A number of different detection molecules can be site-selectively attached to the heavy chain glycans—including phycobiliproteins (e.g., R-PE), QDot probes, Alexa Fluor dyes, pHrodo dye, metal-chelating compounds, and other small molecules like biotin—allowing multiplex analysis with antibodies from the same species. Features include:
- Labeling of 100 μg up to 5 mg of antibody
- Easy to follow step-by-step protocol
- Highly efficient, site-specific, reproducible labeling chemistry
- Kits and dyes available in a flexible format for easy design of multi-color experiments
In general, IgG antibodies contain two N-linked glycans attached to specific conserved asparagine residues located in the antibody heavy chain Fc domain. These sugar chains, predominantly complex biantennary glycans with two terminal branches, are structurally quite homogeneous, and the terminal sequences of the glycan branches are highly consistent. Most of the antibody glycan branches terminate with galactose-N-acetylglucosamine (Gal-GlcNAc-) or with N-acetylglucosamine (GlcNAc-). Removal of the terminal Gal residue with β-galactosidase unmasks the majority of terminal GlcNAc labeling sites for the subsequent enzymatic β-galactosyl transferase (GalT) reaction (Figure 8). After cleavage of terminal Gal residues by β-galactosidase, each N-linked glycan will contain, on average, 2 terminal GlcNAc residues per heavy chain (4 terminal GlcNAc per antibody). The azide-activated antibody can now be labeled with a dibenzocyclooctyne (DIBO)-functionalized probe using copper-free click chemistry (Figure 9).
How to site-specifically label your antibody using SiteClick technology
This video explains how to easily and site specifically label an antibody using an enzymatic and click chemistry approach. This method can be applied to any intact IgG antibody and requires no antibody engineering or complex methodology.
The SiteClick method is compatible with antibodies from a number of different species including, but not limited to, human, rabbit, mouse, rat, goat, hamster, and chicken. Additionally, SiteClick labeling is effective with several antibody classes such as IgG, IgM, and IgY; note that chicken IgY antibodies have 6 heavy chain glycans instead of 2 and therefore can be labeled to a higher extent.
SiteClick antibody labeling system offers flexibility
The SiteClick Antibody Labeling system is available in two formats:
- Kits that contain both the azido modification components for preparing the antibody and a sDIBO alkyne to label the antibody (complete reaction featured in Figure 8A and B).
- A kit that contains only the azido modification component (the first 2 steps of the reaction depicted in Figure 8A).
- A variety of standalone sDIBO alkyne reagents that can be used to label the modified antibody (step in Figure 8B).
This flexibility of formats allows several advantages including the ability to easily change the fluorescent dye used, without impacting the degree of labeling of the same antibody and the ability to prepare a large batch of modified antibody and label only a small amount as needed, again, preserving the consistency of degree of labeling and functionality.
Antibody functionality is highly preserved
The covalent and site-specific attachment of the dyes to the N-linked glycans on the antibody heavy chain Fc domain ensures the immunogenicity of the antigen binding site is preserved, resulting in more efficient binding to the antigen as compared to antibodies randomly labeled with amine-reactive dyes. In a side-by-side comparison of SiteClick-labeled and amine-reactive labeled anti-troponin 1 antibody, the sensitivity of the SiteClick-labeled antibody was greater than that of the amine-reactive labeled antibody (Figure 10).
Lot-to-lot consistency in antibody degree of labeling
Labeling antibodies with the SiteClick antibody labeling system gives you confidence that the antibody will be labeled the same way every time, with no time needed for reaction optimization. This means the same number of dyes attached to each molecule, the same preservation of the antigen binding site, providing in the same results every time. An example of the consistency in labeling between different antibodies is shown in Figure 11.
Table 1. Antigenicity of primary antibodies labeled in degree of labeling study (Figure 11).
Human IgG1 | Human IgG3 | Mouse IgG1 | Mouse IgG2a | Goat Polyclonal |
---|---|---|---|---|
EGFR | Lymphoma cell | GD2 | CD4 | Apolipoprotein-A2 |
HER2/neu | GD3 | β-tubulin | CD3 | |
sLea | sLea | CD8a | CD8 | |
GD2 | f-GM1 | CD45 | CD56 | |
GM2 | Tn | C3b, iC3b | C3b, iC3b, C3dg | |
J591 | Interferon-γ |
SiteClick Antibody Labeling Kits selection guide
Product name | Antibody quantity labeled | Ex/Em* | Cat. No. |
---|---|---|---|
Kits for antibody modification only | |||
SiteClick Azido Modification Kit | 100 μg | N/A | S20026 |
1 mg | S10900 | ||
5 mg | S10901 | ||
Standalone labeling reagents | |||
SiteClick Alexa Fluor 488 sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | 495/519 | C20027 |
1 mg | S10904 | ||
5 mg | S10909 | ||
SiteClick Alexa Fluor 555 sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | 555/565 | C20028 |
SiteClick Alexa Fluor 647 sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | 650/665 | C20029 |
1 mg | S10906 | ||
5 mg | S10911 | ||
SiteClick iFL pHrodo Red sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | 560/585 | C20034 |
1 mg | S10903 | ||
5 mg | S10908 | ||
SiteClick iFL pHrodo Deep Red sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | 640/655 | S10914 |
1 mg | S10915 | ||
SiteClick Biotin sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | N/A | C20030 |
1 mg | S10902 | ||
5 mg | S10907 | ||
SiteClick Amine sDIBO Alkyne | 100 μg | N/A | C20031 |
Kits containing antibody modification + labeling reagent | |||
SiteClick R-PE Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 565/578 | S10467 |
SiteClick Qdot 525 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/525 | S10449 |
SiteClick Qdot 565 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/565 | S10450 |
SiteClick Qdot 585 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/585 | S10451 |
SiteClick Qdot 605 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/605 | S10469 |
SiteClick Qdot 625 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/625 | S10452 |
SiteClick Qdot 655 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/655 | S10453 |
SiteClick Qdot 705 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/705 | S10454 |
SiteClick Qdot 800 Antibody Labeling kit | 100 μg | 405/800 | S10455 |
SiteClick Biotin Antibody Labeling Kit | 100 μg | N/A | S20033 |
*Ex/Em = Fluorescence excitation and emission maxima, in nm.
Find more information about Alexa Fluor dyes and other fluorophores in the Fluorophore Selection Guide
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