Primary Antibodies


Primary Antibody




This page covers what is a primary antibody, differences between primary and secondary antibodies, history of antibody development, and assays that utilize antibodies. Boster's antibodies have been cited over 25,000 times.

Browse all primary antibodies

Browse primary antibodies

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Mouse
$470
Cat # DZ41648
200 μl/vial

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Zebrafish
$470
Cat # DZ41643
200 μl/vial

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Mus musculus papillomavirus type 1
$470
Cat # DZ41639
200 μl/vial

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Human
$470
Cat # DZ41627
200 μl/vial

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Fruit fly
$470
Cat # DZ41617
200 μl/vial

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Pig
$470
Cat # DZ41655
200 μl/vial

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Fruit fly
$470
Cat # DZ41647
200 μl/vial

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Zebrafish
$470
Cat # DZ41646
200 μl/vial

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Fruit fly
$470
Cat # DZ41645
200 μl/vial

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Trypanosoma brucei brucei
$470
Cat # DZ41644
200 μl/vial

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What is a primary antibody?

Primary antibodies are immunoglobulins that can only be bound to a specific targeted antigen . The quality of a primary antibody is usually defined by its affinity and specificity. Affinity is the strength to which it forms the non-covalent bond with the antigen of interests, while specificity is the amount of binding it has with antigens other than its intended antigen, the higher the binding to unintended antigens, the worse the specificity. A good primary antibody can be used to detect, purify and quantitatively measure the antigen of interests.

In biochemistry, cell biology, and histology and various other academic as well as clinical/IVD areas, scientists have long been utilizing antibodies’ unique ability to detect (in other words, bind to) pathogens and immunogens. By attaching a signal generating molecule to the antibody, once the antibody binds to the antigen, we can then measure, either in a visual or quantitative fashion, the existence of the antigen.

"Excellent Caspase-3 antibody from Boster Bio. Easy to use and reliable."

--Postdoctoral Researcher from Duke University Hospital

"This GFAP antibody works perfectly. It did not need several trials to optimize the protocol. I will purchase it again."

--Postdoc from Yale University

"A good PKC Alpha antibody for IP and WB. Works great without optimization. Good quality and ready for publish Ab."

--Research Scientist from University of New England

What is a Secondary Antibody?

How is it different from a primary antibody?

Secondary antibody is the antibody that binds to the primary antibody. Secondary antibody usually carry a signal generating molecule, so that we can measure the signal and detect the presence and quantity of the antigen bound.

However, attaching the signal generating molecule can require a significant amount of work. It is easier to conjugate these molecules, sometimes also referred to as tags, labels or conjugates, to an antibody that can bind to other antibodies, so that we can avoid having to conjugate every antibody we use. The first antibody that is specifically binding to the antigen is called primary antibody, the second antibody that binds to the primary antibody is called secondary antibody. Primary antibodies are typically unconjugated because it is inconvenient to conjugate every primary with necessary antigens. For some of the commonly used primary antibodies, there are conjugated primary antibodies, again, for convenience reasons.

Boster's Primary Antibodies

Validated for IHC, ICC/IF, WB, ELISA, Flow Cytometry

A brief history of antibodies

How are antibodies made, important milestones in the primary antibody history, and some famous scientists.

How are primary antibodies made?

At their origins, all primary antibodies are made from building blocks from immunesystems of the hosts. These building blocks are called complementarity-determining regions (CDRs). CDR is a complex topic which we will not go into in this article so for more information on CDRs you can visit this Wikipedia page.

Traditionally, scientists made polyclonal primary antibodies by immunizing the host animals, typically rabbit, goat, chicken, mice and variety of mammalian and avian species, with antigens, inciting the immune responses which produce antibodies, and extracting (by a method called immune-affinity purification chromatography) the resulting antibodies from the host’s sera or eggs.

In 1975, Georges Köhler and César Milstein developed the monoclonal antibody technology. In 1985, George P Smith developed the method called phage-display, which marks the start of the antibody engineering era where antibody development moves from hijacking hosts’ adaptive immune systems towards rational design.

However the majority of antibodies used today, in the 2020s, are still made from host animals at some point in its production. A truly animal free primary antibody development solution has yet to be invented, primarily because scientists have not found an animal-free mechanism that can replace the somatic maturation of B-cells. Without such mechanism, it is impossible to achieve the same level of affinity and specificity of naturally matured antibodies. This opinion is from the author of this article and is up for debate, if you believe otherwise you can send your arguments to [email protected] or post on our Facebook page.

Monoclonal Antibodies

With the monoclonal technology, people can now fuse the antibody producing cells (Plasma B-cells) with myeloma cell lines making immortal, antibody secreting hybridoma cells. Monoclonal antibodies are derived from clones of the same plasma B cell thus all the antibodies have the same characteristics, including their specificity. Once a good monoclonal antibody clone is discovered, scientists can keep using it without having to worry about consistency issues.

Assays that utilizes primary antibodies

A brief overview of common immunoassays

What is an immunoassay? What are some common immunoassays?

The Primary Antibodies plus secondary antibody combination is used as the core components, or active ingredients in experiments and assays, or in consumer terms, clinical tests. These assays are in turn, called immunoassays, for the fact that their principles rely on the antibody’s ability to bind to antigens specifically.

Common immunoassays include: Western Blotting (a proteomics assay), immunohistochemistry and immunofluorescence (histopathology tests), ELISA (short for Enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, an enzyme mediated immunoassay used for lipid biopsy, or quantitative measurement of existence of target molecules in biological samples) and flow cytometry, which measures the amount of certain cell types of interests in biological samples.

Why use the secondary antibody in addition to the primary?

Because It allows the flexible configuration of immunoassays using the same primary antibody. The primary antibody may work for multiple applications, such as western blotting, a (IHC), immunofluorescence (IF), flow cytometry (FACS) and ELISA. However these applications require different conjugates to visualize/quantify the proteins of interests. This can easily be achieved by conjugating secondary antibodies to different conjugates so that the antigen bound by a primary antibody can appear fluorescently green in one IF experiment and yellow in a different IF experiment and yet resulting in a brown precipitation in a western blot experiment. This flexibility is especially important in immunofluorescence where multiplexing antigens, in other words, showing different antigens with different colors on the same sample, is very important. The primary-secondary antibody system enables dual (or more) labeling of specimens, which allows you to ask more questions with the specimens you have, and provide you more robust answers/data that are contextually connected.

The signal amplification system for secondary antibodies

Sometimes it is not enough to simply bind the secondary antibody to signal molecules. This is because sometimes the level of target protein is low and the surface area of the secondary antibody molecule is limited and only a limited amount of conjugates can be covalently conjugated to the secondary antibody, and the amount is not enough. In these cases, signal amplification systems, which are sometimes called detection systems, are used. The first and mostly widely used detection system is the biotin-avidin complex (ABC). The strongest non-covalent bond between molecules known to humanity is the bond between biotin and avidin. Each avidin binds to 4 biotin while Each biotin can bind to 2 avidin forming a Tetrahedron complex. With avidins conjugated to signal molecules (typically Horseradish Peroxide, HRP), the primary-secondary-ABC system allows researchers to locate the proteins of interest with low background and high specificity. Other detection systems were later developed using poly-saccharides and other organic polymers or complexes. Boster Bio’s Super Vision Detection kits is one of those innovative detection systems.

Special Primary Antibody Formats

Here are some highlights of special primary antibody formats. Most primary antibodies are plain and unconjugated antibodies, but the ones below are not most primary antibodies.

Primary antibodies can be developed to recognize post-translational modifications (PTMs) including phosphorylation, methylation, glycosylation, or acetylation. PTMs are essential to most Mechanisms Of Actions (MOAs) of diseases and biological processes, making these PTM-specific antibodies great tools to study and identify proteins that are activated, silenced, processed, in these diseases and biological processes. Boster offers a good amount of phospho-specific antibodies and other PTM specific antibodies.

Even though we can use conjugated secondary antibodies to develop immunoassays, conjugated primary antibodies can be convenient and thus sought after because they eliminate the need for a secondary antibody. It is common for companies to sell ready-conjugated primary antibodies for common protein targets for use in certain applications. Boster offers a line of conjugated antibodies for flow cytometry and histology uses.

When quantifying the protein in an ELISA experiment, the scientists would need two antibodies, one to immobilize the antigen of interest, and one to generate the signal. Thus these two antibodies need to bind to different epitopes of the antigen for this to work, making them an “antibody pair”. Boster offers a line of antibody pairs called EZ Set ® ELISA kits.

Though the most common antibodies used in research are bi-valent, i.e. having two antigen binding regions each made of 3 CDRs, some species have only 1 antigen binding region, also called monospecific. Some technologies can also convert normal Y-shaped antibodies into monospecific antibodies. These antibodies supposedly have better penetration to the inner parts of cells, making them better for some histology studies that require such qualities. The author of this article has yet to see comprehensive third party data supporting such claim.

Featured Primary Antibodies

Primary Antibodies categories

All Monoclonal antibodies

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Boster provides mouse and rabbit monoclonal antibodies that have been validated for several application including IHC, ICC/IF, WB, IP, and Flow cytometry

Go to all monoclonal antibodies page

Rabbit Monoclonal Antibodies

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Known for their high specifity and affinity, hundreds of rabbit monoclonal antibodies that have been tested for several applications are available from Boster

Go to Rabbit monoclonal antibodies page

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Boster ELISA kits are well-cited

Boster antibodies and ELISA kits are cited over 23,000+ times in publications around the world. According to the big data research company CiteAb.com, Bosterbio is globally the fastest growing antibody company in terms of the number of academic publication citations. For Picokine® ELISA kits specifically, an estimate of 6000+ publications are available. You can find specific citations for ELISA kits and antibodies on each product page.

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Primary Antibodies

Primary and Secondary Antibodies

Boster Bio offers over 16,000 antibodies that have been validated for IHC, WB, ELISA, and FC in human, mouse, and rat samples. Rabbit and mouse monoclonal antibodies as well as rabbit polyclonal antibodies are available. Buy a primary antibody and get a secondary antibody for free!

ELISA Kits

ELISA Kits

More than 1,000 ELISA kits, both singleplex and multiplex, that have been cited 6,000+ times are available at Boster. We offer our Boster-branded Picokine® ELISA kits (sandwich ELISA) and EZ-Set® ELISA kits (DIY antibody pairs) in addition to many multiplex ELISA kits.

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Recombinant Proteins

Boster provides a wide range of human, mouse, and rat recombinant proteins, which include cytokines, growth factors, chemokines, and many more. Our recombinant proteins have high stability, biological activity, and purity.

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Reagents

Boster offers all the reagents you need for your immunostaining and western blotting experiments. We've got everything from buffers to lysates to kits, including our popular and well-cited BCA, CCK-8, and MTT assay kits.