Antibodies.com introduces knockout (KO) validation

October 31, 2018

Antibodies.com has incorporated knockout validation as part of its standard antibody validation process.

MONTE SERONO, CA, UNITED STATES - Oct 31, 2018 - Antibodies are widely used in pre-clinical research to study proteins and their functions in biological pathways and diseased states. Antibodies.com has incorporated knockout validation (using CRISPR/Cas9), the most accepted method for validating antibody specificity, as part of its standard antibody validation process.

Antibodies, with their high specificity and sensitivity, help life science researchers to easily identify proteins of interest at various expression levels.

However, a growing number of high-impact studies and publications have shown that not all antibodies are specific; contributing to the increasing amount of irreproducible pre-clinical research (Freedman et al., 2015Baker, 2015Mullane et al., 2015Bradbury & Plückthun, 2015).

The most accepted method for validating antibody specificity is through knockout validation (Uhlen et al., 2016Bordeaux et al., 2014Rhodes & Trimmers, 2008). In knockout validation, antibody specificity is confirmed by testing the antibody on a knockout sample or cell line, which does not express the target protein, alongside a normal (or wild-type) cell line. The target protein is not present in the knockout sample or cell line as the gene encoding the protein is inactivated (or "knocked out") through replacement or disruption of DNA. The data is compared side-by-side and if the antibody is specific there will be no detection in the knockout sample or cell line but specific detection in the normal cell line.

Antibodies.com has incorporated knockout validation, using CRISPR/Cas9, as part of its standard antibody validation process. The knockout validated seal indicates that an antibody, in addition to being validated in the recommended applications and species, has had its specificity confirmed by knockout validation.

To find our more, please visit www.antibodies.com