While multiple-peptide co-immunization is designed to produce a good polyclonal antibody that can capture the protein from multiple epitopes is produced. However, in practice all antigens are not equal in immunizing potential. Very often the immunodominant peptide will produce the overwhelming majority of antibodies, and little ground is gained for the added expense.
Bio-Synthesis will synthesize, purify and conjugate each peptide separately. Individual KLH conjugates are then mixed in equimolar ratios and used as immunogenic. Individual antisera are titered by ELISA against each peptide separately. We offer four peptide cocktail custom antibody production packages, each of which provides a minimum of four antibodies against your protein of interest. Should you not find a package that suits your needs, we will design one for you.
Consult with our peptide and antibody production teams to help with the best decision regarding multiple peptide co-immunization options.
Strategies for Cocktail-peptide Co-immunization
Two strategies for multiple-peptide co-immunization
Homogeneous peptide conjugation and immunization - This appears to be the more preferred strategy in multiple-peptide co-immunization, in which several peptide sequences represent different epitopes of the same protein is conjugated into a protein carrier separately and each conjugate is then purified and characterized. These different peptide-protein conjugates are mixed together and formulated for immunization. Since each carrier protein molecular is conjugated only to one type of peptides, this may enable distinct recognition and T-cell responses to each peptide antigen. The antibodies can be isolated as a group responding to all peptide epitopes, or as individual antibodies responding to a specific peptide epitope.
Heterogenous peptide conjugation and immunization - This is where several different peptides representing different epitopes of the same protein are mixed together before conjugation. The mixture of peptides is then conjugated as one batch into a carrier protein. While this strategy has an advantage of using a single conjugation step for all peptides in the mixture, the obvious assumption here is that each peptide sequence will conjugate with equal efficiency to the carrier protein. However, this will not be easy to prove because it will be difficult to characterize each peptide-protein conjugate. It is also uncertain whether or not each peptide epitope will be equally recognized by the immune system and elicit antibodies to the same extent. In this approach, the antibodies can also be isolated as a group responding to all peptide epitopes, or as individual antibodies responding to a specific peptide epitope.
Several other types of anti-peptide polyclonal antibody services also offered in our laboratory
- Single anti-peptide antibody
- Peptide cocktail immunization
- Peptide Phospho-specific antibody
- Multiple antigen peptide antibody
- User-designed antibody package
- User-supplied antigen antibody packages