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Fit-for-purpose based testing and validation of antibodies to amino- and carboxy-terminal domains of cannabinoid receptor

Authors :
Farmacología
Fisiología
Neurociencias
Química analítica
Farmakologia
Fisiologia
Kimika analitikoa
Neurozientziak
Echeazarra Escudero, Leire
García del Caño, Gontzal
Barrondo Lacarra, Sergio
González Burguera, Imanol
Saumell Esnaola, Miquel
Aretxabala Rodríguez, Xabier
López de Jesús, Maider
Borrega Román, Leire
Mato Santos, Susana
Ledent, Catherine
Matute Almau, Carlos José
Goicolea Altuna, María Aranzazu
Sallés Alvira, Joan
Farmacología
Fisiología
Neurociencias
Química analítica
Farmakologia
Fisiologia
Kimika analitikoa
Neurozientziak
Echeazarra Escudero, Leire
García del Caño, Gontzal
Barrondo Lacarra, Sergio
González Burguera, Imanol
Saumell Esnaola, Miquel
Aretxabala Rodríguez, Xabier
López de Jesús, Maider
Borrega Román, Leire
Mato Santos, Susana
Ledent, Catherine
Matute Almau, Carlos José
Goicolea Altuna, María Aranzazu
Sallés Alvira, Joan
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Specific and selective anti-CB1 antibodies are among the most powerful research tools to unravel the complex biological processes mediated by the CB1 receptor in both physiological and pathological conditions. However, low performance of antibodies remains a major source of inconsistency between results from different laboratories. Using a variety of techniques, including some of the most commonly accepted ones for antibody specificity testing, we identified three of five commercial antibodies against different regions of CB1 receptor as the best choice for specific end-use purposes. Specifically, an antibody against a long fragment of the extracellular amino tail of CB1 receptor (but not one against a short sequence of the extreme amino-terminus) detected strong surface staining when applied to live cells, whereas two different antibodies against an identical fragment of the extreme carboxy-terminus of CB1 receptor (but not one against an upstream peptide) showed acceptable performance on all platforms, although they behaved differently in immunohistochemical assays depending on the tissue fixation procedure used and showed different specificity in Western blot assays, which made each of them particularly suitable for one of those techniques. Our results provide a framework to interpret past and future results derived from the use of different anti-CB1 antibodies in the context of current knowledge about the CB1 receptor at the molecular level, and highlight the need for an adequate validation for specific purposes, not only before antibodies are placed on the market, but also before the decision to discontinue them is made.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
Open Access funding provided thanks to the CRUE-CSIC agreement with Springer Nature. This work was funded by Basque Government (IT1230-19, to J.S.), MINECO CTQ2017-85686-R (Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness, to J.S. and M.A.G.), FEDER and ISCIII (AES 2018-PI18/00513, to S.M.), MINECO SAF2016-75292-R MINECO, to C.M.) and Centro de Investigacion Biomedica en Red de Salud Mental (CIBERSAM, to J.S. and S.B.)., English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1302761167
Document Type :
Electronic Resource