Jackson Immuno Research Inc.
specializing in secondary antibodies and conjugates
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Whole IgG Affinity-Purified Secondary Antibodies

"I have used a wide variety of secondaries and Jackson ImmunoResearch has consistently been the best. The fluorophores are bright and stable and their selective (x reactivity removed) secondaries have always shown species specificity in multiple labeling."

Janet Duerr, Ohio University

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Fab Fragment Secondary Antibodies

Monovalent Fab Fragments of Affinity-Purified Secondary Antibodies

Fab fragment antibodies are generated by papain digestion of whole IgG antibodies to remove the entire Fc fragment, including the hinge region. These antibodies are monovalent, containing only a single antigen binding site. The molecular weight a Fab fragment is about 50 kDa. They can be used to block endogenous immunoglobulins on cells, tissues or other surfaces, and to block the exposed immunoglobulins in multiple labeling experiments using primary antibodies from the same species.

Digestion of Whole IgG to Create Fab Fragments and an Fc Fragment

Key of elements
Fc Fragment Fab fragment Fab fragment Whole IgG Fab fragment Fab fragment
Fc Fragment Antigen Binding Region
Fc Fragment Fab Fragments

Fab Fragments Can Be Utilized in Three Key Ways:


Why Use Fab Fragments?

Monovalent Fab fragments of affinity-purified secondary antibodies are offered to block endogenous immunoglobulins in tissue sections or on cell surfaces, to cover (block) immunoglobulins when double labeling primary antibodies from the same host species, or to Fab-label primary antibodies prior to incubation with the experimental sample. They can be used for these purposes because each Fab fragment has only a single antigen binding site (i.e. they are monovalent), and they are non-precipitating.

Why is Monovalency Important?

Divalent (whole IgG or F(ab')2 fragment) antibodies are not recommended for blocking because they have two antigen binding sites. After binding endogenous IgG or the first primary antibody, some antigen binding sites on a divalent secondary antibody may remain unoccupied, which could capture a primary antibody introduced in a subsequent step. Capture of the primary antibody would allow detection of that primary by a labeled secondary antibody, resulting in background staining or apparent signal overlap. The use of monovalent Fab fragments avoids this problem.

Selected literature references:

  • Wessel and McClay, J. Histochem. Cytochem. 1986. 34, 703
  • Franzusoff et al., J. Cell Biology. 1991. 112, 27
  • Lewis Carl et al., J. Histochem. Cytochem. 1993. 41, 1273
  • Negoescu et al., J. Histochem. Cytochem. 1994. 42, 433

We also have a limited inventory of DyLight™ 488 / 549 / 594 / 647, Cy™2, Cy™5, and Texas Red® conjugated secondary antibodies.

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