Question
I am using your Fab-ZAP Human (IT-51) and I want to know how many antibody molecules can a secondary antibody conjugate theoretically bind to?
Answer
A whole IgG (bivalent) secondary antibody in theory is capable of binding two antigen molecules. Since our Fab-ZAP conjugates actually use a monovalent secondary antibody, in theory they would be able to each bind one antigen molecule. Our Fab-ZAP human conjugates use polyclonal monovalent secondary antibodies raised against both heavy and light chain of IgG and can cross-react across immunoglobulin classes and subclasses of the same species since they share the same light chain. In theory it would be possible that your primary antibody could have several secondary conjugates attached.
Question
When exploring the usage concentration for Fab-ZAP Human, what is the recommended concentration range (for example, is it a few times the initial concentration of the analyte antibody / the highest test concentration)?
Answer
Our standard protocol (in vitro only) for our Fab-ZAP secondary conjugates is to maintain a constant concentration of 4.5 nM of the Fab-ZAP while titrating the primary antibody, usually in a range starting at 10 nM with 1:5 to 1:10 serial dilutions. The goal would be to have the primary antibody as a ‘variable’ and the Fab-ZAP as the ‘constant’. Also, it’s important to saturate the primary antibody with Fab-ZAP secondary conjugate, as any ‘free unreacted primary antibody’ would compete with ‘antibody+Fab-ZAP conjugate’ for binding sites on the cell. I have attached a publication that discusses this topic.
Resources
Fab-ZAP human [IT-51, KIT-51] | ZAP Secondary Conjugates
ZAP Antibody Internalization Kit literature
Cytotoxicity Assay Protocol for ZAP Antibody Internalization Kits
Online Calculator: Preparing ZAP Antibody Kit Samples
Concentration Calculations: Convert molarity to mg/ml and mg/ml to molarity (PDF worksheet)
